We can´t hide it, here at VisualPolitik we love Asia, and that’s partly because, we believe that the world’s centre is already on this continent. But in the last few decades, one country has stood out of the crowd, and that is China.
China has faced two major threats in the last years: less growth and much, much, more debt. In fact, this has even lead to an important question: Can China go bankrupt? Well, that's what we'll be talking in today's video!
And don't forget to visit our friend’s podcast, ReconsiderMedia:
http://www.reconsidermedia.com/
Some related articles:
BigRatingsFirmsStronger Than Ever - https://www.wsj.com/articles/what-crisis-big-ratings-firms-stronger-than-ever-1457655084
ChineseGhost towns - http://www.businessinsider.com/these-chinese-cities-are-ghost-towns-2017-4
China overcapacity 'wreaking far-reaching damage' - http://www.dw.com/en/china-overcapacity-wreaking-far-reaching-damage/a-19060913
Why China’sGrowingDebtLoad Worries the World? -
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/05/24/business/china-downgrade-explained.html

published:29 Jun 2017

views:504897

A very poor country turned modern economy, China is now facing economic hardship. How did this happen? What led to its astonishing economic growth and what’s fueling its current woes? JoinTyler Cowen as he dives into the rise and fall of China’s economy.
Many of China’s current problems are rooted deep in the country's economic history. We start our discussion in 1979 when Chinese reformers introduced the concept of private property and more capitalistic incentives, privatized agriculture, and allowed for more manufacturing and exporting — all of which put China’s economy on an upward trajectory.
Along with these reforms came transformational growth. For much of the past 35 years, China’s GDP per capita has grown at about 10% per year. In other words, living standards in China doubled about every seven years.
What did the economy look like during these periods of rapid growth? High levels of savings and high levels of investment, especially in infrastructure projects. China’s economy required more complex investments too — in health care and and start-ups, for example.
A turning point for the Chinese economy came in 2009. With the recession affecting many other countries, China’s government took steps to avoid the recession and keep the economy afloat, but at a cost. Debt skyrocketed during the period, which is proving less sustainable as China’s rate of growth declines.
There’s some discrepancy over China’s current growth rate — the Chinese government claims 7% per year, but external observers predict this rate is much lower, and that China is now entering a recession. To gain a better understanding, we take a look at five specific areas in this video: the real estate bubble, the stock market bubble, the excess level of municipal debt, the excess capacity among Chinese businesses, and the risk of capital flight. When you consider all of these areas together, it paints a very complex picture and one which is proving difficult for China to manage.
Even still, there are reasons to remain optimistic. China has invested tremendously in human capital, which is one of the most valuable assets to any modern economy. These investments in human capital will certainly survive the current recession and help facilitate a bright economic future.
Ask a question about the video: http://bit.ly/1pprkc8
Learn more about China's economy with these resources: http://bit.ly/1LXkCi9
What should Tyler Cowen cover in his next video? Vote or submit your idea here: http://bit.ly/1ppr1Os
Everyday Economics course page: http://bit.ly/21KO9Vq
Help us caption & translate this video!
http://amara.org/v/HQ0d/

published:21 Oct 2015

views:229737

China can not develop its own technologies? It can not innovate fast enough?
The debt is too high and government can not cope with it.
Foreign countries block Chinese investment and strategy to get ownership over ressources and buy foreign technologies.
PATREON: https://www.patreon.com/chinanonstop

published:23 Feb 2018

views:81

China’s leaders have a mammoth task steering the world’s second largest economy out of its current slowdown. This QuickTake examines the challenges they face.
Like this video? Subscribe to Bloomberg on YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/Bloomberg?sub_confirmation=1
And subscribe to Bloomberg Politics for the latest political news:
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ChinaDocumentary: How China Dominated The World's Economy
China, officially the People's Republic of China (PRC), is a sovereign state in East Asia. With a population of over 1.381 billion, it is the world's most populous state.
China's socialist market economy is the world's second largest economy by nominal GDP, and the world's largest economy by purchasing power parity according to the IMF, although China's National Bureau of Statistics rejects this claim. Until 2015 China was the world's fastest-growing major economy, with growth rates averaging 10% over 30 years. Due to historical and political facts of China's developing economy, China's public sector accounts for a bigger share of the national economy than the burgeoning private sector.
China is a global hub for manufacturing, and is the largest manufacturing economy in the world as well as the largest exporter of goods in the world. China is also the world's fastest growing consumer market and second largest importer of goods in the world. China is a net importer of services products.
Watch More: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCgPmFlw7U0VgUFIkWBDpZSg
Sources:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economy_of_China
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/China

The Rise of China Mini-Documentary | Episode 1 | China's Economic Miracle
Two centuries ago, Napoleon warned, “Let China sleep: when she wakes, she will shake the world.”
The rise of China will undoubtedly be one of the great dramas of the twenty-first century. China's extraordinary economic growth and active diplomacy are already transforming East Asia, and future decades will see even greater increases in Chinese power and influence.
In this episode we will look only at the sheer size of China today. We will then look at it’s threats, challenges and confrontations with America in future episodes.
In 1980, China’s gross domestic product (GDP) was less than 300 billion dollars; by 2015, it was 11 trillion dollars—making it the world’s second-largest economy by market exchange rates. China’s trade with the outside world in 1980 amounted to less than 40 billion dollars; by 2015, it had increased one hundredfold, to a whopping 4 trillion dollars.
Even at its lower growth rate in 2015, China’s economy created a Greece every sixteen weeks and an Israel every twenty-five weeks.
Measured by purchasing power parity, which measures how many aircraft, missiles, ships, sailors, pilots, drones, bases, and other military- related items a state can buy and the prices it has to pay in its own national currency, China has not only surpassed the US, but also now accounts for roughly 18 percent of world GDP, compared to just 2 percent in 1980.
By 2005, the country was building the square-foot equivalent of today’s Rome every two weeks.
Between 2011 and 2013, China both produced and used more cement than US did in the entire twentieth century.
On its current path, China will surpass the US to become the world leader in research-and-development spending by 2019.
Since June 2013, the world’s fastest supercomputer has been located not in Silicon Valley but in China. Indeed, in the rankings of the world’s 500 fastest supercomputers—a list from which China was absent in 2001—today it has 167, two more than the United States. Moreover, China’s top supercomputer is five times faster than the closest American competitor. And while China’s supercomputers previously relied heavily on American processors, its top computer in 2016 was built entirely with domestic processors.
As China’s economy has gotten bigger, its guns and tanks—and their twenty-first-century equivalents—have gotten better, and allowed for a new level of competition with other great powers, especially the United States. Just as technology start-ups like Facebook and Uber have used the concept of disruptive innovation to upend previously dominant firms, the Chinese military is developing new technologies that can counter ships, planes, and satellites that the US has developed over decades—and for a fraction of the cost.
China has increased its defense spending nearly fivefold over the last decade. China currently spends more on defense than Japan, South Korea, the Philippines, and Vietnam combined, and China’s military spending is second only to the United States.
China is now building a Blue Water navy. A Blue Water navy patrols the oceans. It will take another thirty years (assuming economic progression) for China to build naval capacity to seriously challenge the most powerful seaborne force the world has ever seen – the US navy. But in the medium to short term, as it builds, and trains, and learns, the Chinese navy will bump up against its rivals in the seas; and how those bumps are managed will define great power politics in this century.
China intends to become a two-ocean power (Pacific and Indian). To achieve this China is investing in deep-water ports in Burma, Bangladesh, Pakistan and Sri Lanka – an investment which buys it good relations, the potential for its future navy to have friendly bases to visit or reside in, and trade links back home.
In 2014, China inaugurated a major international economic development program by financing infrastructure projects in the historical silk route countries. It is engaged in financing economic infrastructure projects in the silk route countries with positive ROI for China and the recipient countries.
The Chinese are also building ports in Kenya, railway lines in Angola, and a hydroelectric dam in Ethiopia. They are scouring the length and breadth of the whole of Africa for minerals and precious metals.
Don't forget to subscribe to our YouTube ChannelSign up to our website and submit video suggestions:
www.kjvids.co.uk
Like our Facebook page for exclusive updates:
https://www.facebook.com/KJVids
Follow us on Twitter to be informed when we post:
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All Rights Reserved. Contact info@kjvids.co.uk if you are interested in licensing our content, advertising or working with us in other ways.

published:11 Sep 2017

views:133439

For more programming, please visit: http://www.ncuscr.org.
In a new book, Will China’sEconomyCollapse? New York UniversityAdjunct ProfessorAnn Lee addresses a key question that China watchers and economists have been asking for more than two decades. Between ballooning debt to GDP ratios, overinvestment in the property market, and industrial overcapacity, the uneven structure of China’s economic growth provides plenty of reasons for concern. Yet so far, China’s unique blend of state-led and laissez-faire capitalism has proved remarkably strong, defying numerous predictions of imminent economic catastrophe. In her book, Professor Lee examines why China’s economy might be more resilient than commonly presumed, and provides a careful analysis of its strengths and weaknesses. She also addresses the implications for other capitalist societies around the world and offers advice to policy makers about what changes must occur to ensure continued global stability and prosperity. Professor Lee discussed her book, China’s economic outlook, and the future of global capitalism on February 7, 2018.
Ann Lee is an internationally recognized authority on China’s economic relations and the CEO of Coterie, a new technology investment consortium. She is also a former visiting professor at Peking University and currently an adjunct professor at New York University where she teaches macroeconomics and financial derivatives. She consults with policymakers from Europe, Asia, Latin America, and the U.S. about U.S.-China relations, international finance and trade, and China’s political economy.
In addition to numerous television and radio appearances, Dr. Lee’s op-eds have appeared in major publications in the United States and Asia.
A former investment banker in high yield bonds and technology stocks, as well as a partner and credit derivatives trader in two multi-billion dollar hedge fund firms, she is also the author of the book What the U.S. Can Learn from China, an award winning international bestseller. She is an active member of the Authors Guild and the Pen AmericaSociety.
Dr. Lee attended U.C. Berkeley, Princeton University’s Woodrow Wilson School of International Affairs, and Harvard Business School.

China is a global hub for manufacturing, and is the largest manufacturing economy in the world as well as the largest exporter of goods in the world. China is also the world's fastest growing consumer market and second largest importer of goods in the world. China is a net importer of services products.

Economy

An economy (Greek οίκος-household and νέμoμαι - manage) is an area of the production, distribution or trade, and consumption of goods and services by different agents in a given geographical location. The economic agents can be individuals, businesses, organizations, or governments. Transactions occur when two parties agree to the value or price of the transacted good or service, commonly expressed in a certain currency.

Economic activity is spurred by production which uses natural resources, labor, and capital. It has changed over time due to technology (automation, accelerator of process, reduction of cost functions), innovation (new products, services, processes, new markets, expands markets, diversification of markets, niche markets, increases revenue functions) such as that which produces intellectual property and changes in industrial relations (child labor being replaced with universal access to education).

A given economy is the result of a set of processes that involves its culture, values, education, technological evolution, history, social organization, political structure and legal systems, as well as its geography, natural resource endowment, and ecology, as main factors. These factors give context, content, and set the conditions and parameters in which an economy functions.

Why is the CHINESE Economy ADDICTED to DEBT? - VisualPolitik EN

We can´t hide it, here at VisualPolitik we love Asia, and that’s partly because, we believe that the world’s centre is already on this continent. But in the last few decades, one country has stood out of the crowd, and that is China.
China has faced two major threats in the last years: less growth and much, much, more debt. In fact, this has even lead to an important question: Can China go bankrupt? Well, that's what we'll be talking in today's video!
And don't forget to visit our friend’s podcast, ReconsiderMedia:
http://www.reconsidermedia.com/
Some related articles:
BigRatingsFirmsStronger Than Ever - https://www.wsj.com/articles/what-crisis-big-ratings-firms-stronger-than-ever-1457655084
ChineseGhost towns - http://www.businessinsider.com/these-chinese-cities-are-ghost-towns-2017-4
China overcapacity 'wreaking far-reaching damage' - http://www.dw.com/en/china-overcapacity-wreaking-far-reaching-damage/a-19060913
Why China’sGrowingDebtLoad Worries the World? -
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/05/24/business/china-downgrade-explained.html

12:25

Tyler Cowen: The Rise and Fall of the Chinese Economy

Tyler Cowen: The Rise and Fall of the Chinese Economy

Tyler Cowen: The Rise and Fall of the Chinese Economy

A very poor country turned modern economy, China is now facing economic hardship. How did this happen? What led to its astonishing economic growth and what’s fueling its current woes? JoinTyler Cowen as he dives into the rise and fall of China’s economy.
Many of China’s current problems are rooted deep in the country's economic history. We start our discussion in 1979 when Chinese reformers introduced the concept of private property and more capitalistic incentives, privatized agriculture, and allowed for more manufacturing and exporting — all of which put China’s economy on an upward trajectory.
Along with these reforms came transformational growth. For much of the past 35 years, China’s GDP per capita has grown at about 10% per year. In other words, living standards in China doubled about every seven years.
What did the economy look like during these periods of rapid growth? High levels of savings and high levels of investment, especially in infrastructure projects. China’s economy required more complex investments too — in health care and and start-ups, for example.
A turning point for the Chinese economy came in 2009. With the recession affecting many other countries, China’s government took steps to avoid the recession and keep the economy afloat, but at a cost. Debt skyrocketed during the period, which is proving less sustainable as China’s rate of growth declines.
There’s some discrepancy over China’s current growth rate — the Chinese government claims 7% per year, but external observers predict this rate is much lower, and that China is now entering a recession. To gain a better understanding, we take a look at five specific areas in this video: the real estate bubble, the stock market bubble, the excess level of municipal debt, the excess capacity among Chinese businesses, and the risk of capital flight. When you consider all of these areas together, it paints a very complex picture and one which is proving difficult for China to manage.
Even still, there are reasons to remain optimistic. China has invested tremendously in human capital, which is one of the most valuable assets to any modern economy. These investments in human capital will certainly survive the current recession and help facilitate a bright economic future.
Ask a question about the video: http://bit.ly/1pprkc8
Learn more about China's economy with these resources: http://bit.ly/1LXkCi9
What should Tyler Cowen cover in his next video? Vote or submit your idea here: http://bit.ly/1ppr1Os
Everyday Economics course page: http://bit.ly/21KO9Vq
Help us caption & translate this video!
http://amara.org/v/HQ0d/

15:37

China economy is FAILING- bankruptcy ahead?

China economy is FAILING- bankruptcy ahead?

China economy is FAILING- bankruptcy ahead?

China can not develop its own technologies? It can not innovate fast enough?
The debt is too high and government can not cope with it.
Foreign countries block Chinese investment and strategy to get ownership over ressources and buy foreign technologies.
PATREON: https://www.patreon.com/chinanonstop

1:47

Here's Why China's Economy Will Be So Hard to Fix

Here's Why China's Economy Will Be So Hard to Fix

Here's Why China's Economy Will Be So Hard to Fix

China’s leaders have a mammoth task steering the world’s second largest economy out of its current slowdown. This QuickTake examines the challenges they face.
Like this video? Subscribe to Bloomberg on YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/Bloomberg?sub_confirmation=1
And subscribe to Bloomberg Politics for the latest political news:
http://www.youtube.com/BloombergPolitics?sub_confirmation=1
Bloomberg is the FirstWord in business news, delivering breaking news & analysis, up-to-the-minute market data, features, profiles and more: http://www.bloomberg.com
Connect with us on...
Twitter: https://twitter.com/business
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/bloombergbusiness
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/bloombergbusiness/
Bloomberg Television brings you coverage of the biggest business stories and exclusive interviews with newsmakers, 24 hours a day: http://www.bloomberg.com/live
Connect with us on...
Twitter: https://twitter.com/bloombergtv
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/BloombergTelevision
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/bloombergtv

8:15

Is China's economy in good shape? Not really... | Xander Snyder Interview

Is China's economy in good shape? Not really... | Xander Snyder Interview

Is China's economy in good shape? Not really... | Xander Snyder Interview

China Documentary: How China Dominated The World's Economy

ChinaDocumentary: How China Dominated The World's Economy
China, officially the People's Republic of China (PRC), is a sovereign state in East Asia. With a population of over 1.381 billion, it is the world's most populous state.
China's socialist market economy is the world's second largest economy by nominal GDP, and the world's largest economy by purchasing power parity according to the IMF, although China's National Bureau of Statistics rejects this claim. Until 2015 China was the world's fastest-growing major economy, with growth rates averaging 10% over 30 years. Due to historical and political facts of China's developing economy, China's public sector accounts for a bigger share of the national economy than the burgeoning private sector.
China is a global hub for manufacturing, and is the largest manufacturing economy in the world as well as the largest exporter of goods in the world. China is also the world's fastest growing consumer market and second largest importer of goods in the world. China is a net importer of services products.
Watch More: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCgPmFlw7U0VgUFIkWBDpZSg
Sources:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economy_of_China
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/China

The Rise of China Mini-Documentary | Episode 1 | China's Economic Miracle
Two centuries ago, Napoleon warned, “Let China sleep: when she wakes, she will shake the world.”
The rise of China will undoubtedly be one of the great dramas of the twenty-first century. China's extraordinary economic growth and active diplomacy are already transforming East Asia, and future decades will see even greater increases in Chinese power and influence.
In this episode we will look only at the sheer size of China today. We will then look at it’s threats, challenges and confrontations with America in future episodes.
In 1980, China’s gross domestic product (GDP) was less than 300 billion dollars; by 2015, it was 11 trillion dollars—making it the world’s second-largest economy by market exchange rates. China’s trade with the outside world in 1980 amounted to less than 40 billion dollars; by 2015, it had increased one hundredfold, to a whopping 4 trillion dollars.
Even at its lower growth rate in 2015, China’s economy created a Greece every sixteen weeks and an Israel every twenty-five weeks.
Measured by purchasing power parity, which measures how many aircraft, missiles, ships, sailors, pilots, drones, bases, and other military- related items a state can buy and the prices it has to pay in its own national currency, China has not only surpassed the US, but also now accounts for roughly 18 percent of world GDP, compared to just 2 percent in 1980.
By 2005, the country was building the square-foot equivalent of today’s Rome every two weeks.
Between 2011 and 2013, China both produced and used more cement than US did in the entire twentieth century.
On its current path, China will surpass the US to become the world leader in research-and-development spending by 2019.
Since June 2013, the world’s fastest supercomputer has been located not in Silicon Valley but in China. Indeed, in the rankings of the world’s 500 fastest supercomputers—a list from which China was absent in 2001—today it has 167, two more than the United States. Moreover, China’s top supercomputer is five times faster than the closest American competitor. And while China’s supercomputers previously relied heavily on American processors, its top computer in 2016 was built entirely with domestic processors.
As China’s economy has gotten bigger, its guns and tanks—and their twenty-first-century equivalents—have gotten better, and allowed for a new level of competition with other great powers, especially the United States. Just as technology start-ups like Facebook and Uber have used the concept of disruptive innovation to upend previously dominant firms, the Chinese military is developing new technologies that can counter ships, planes, and satellites that the US has developed over decades—and for a fraction of the cost.
China has increased its defense spending nearly fivefold over the last decade. China currently spends more on defense than Japan, South Korea, the Philippines, and Vietnam combined, and China’s military spending is second only to the United States.
China is now building a Blue Water navy. A Blue Water navy patrols the oceans. It will take another thirty years (assuming economic progression) for China to build naval capacity to seriously challenge the most powerful seaborne force the world has ever seen – the US navy. But in the medium to short term, as it builds, and trains, and learns, the Chinese navy will bump up against its rivals in the seas; and how those bumps are managed will define great power politics in this century.
China intends to become a two-ocean power (Pacific and Indian). To achieve this China is investing in deep-water ports in Burma, Bangladesh, Pakistan and Sri Lanka – an investment which buys it good relations, the potential for its future navy to have friendly bases to visit or reside in, and trade links back home.
In 2014, China inaugurated a major international economic development program by financing infrastructure projects in the historical silk route countries. It is engaged in financing economic infrastructure projects in the silk route countries with positive ROI for China and the recipient countries.
The Chinese are also building ports in Kenya, railway lines in Angola, and a hydroelectric dam in Ethiopia. They are scouring the length and breadth of the whole of Africa for minerals and precious metals.
Don't forget to subscribe to our YouTube ChannelSign up to our website and submit video suggestions:
www.kjvids.co.uk
Like our Facebook page for exclusive updates:
https://www.facebook.com/KJVids
Follow us on Twitter to be informed when we post:
https://twitter.com/kjvids2016
Support our content by becoming a KJ Patreon
https://www.patreon.com/kjvids
All Rights Reserved. Contact info@kjvids.co.uk if you are interested in licensing our content, advertising or working with us in other ways.

1:04:09

Will China's Economy Collapse? with Ann Lee

Will China's Economy Collapse? with Ann Lee

Will China's Economy Collapse? with Ann Lee

For more programming, please visit: http://www.ncuscr.org.
In a new book, Will China’sEconomyCollapse? New York UniversityAdjunct ProfessorAnn Lee addresses a key question that China watchers and economists have been asking for more than two decades. Between ballooning debt to GDP ratios, overinvestment in the property market, and industrial overcapacity, the uneven structure of China’s economic growth provides plenty of reasons for concern. Yet so far, China’s unique blend of state-led and laissez-faire capitalism has proved remarkably strong, defying numerous predictions of imminent economic catastrophe. In her book, Professor Lee examines why China’s economy might be more resilient than commonly presumed, and provides a careful analysis of its strengths and weaknesses. She also addresses the implications for other capitalist societies around the world and offers advice to policy makers about what changes must occur to ensure continued global stability and prosperity. Professor Lee discussed her book, China’s economic outlook, and the future of global capitalism on February 7, 2018.
Ann Lee is an internationally recognized authority on China’s economic relations and the CEO of Coterie, a new technology investment consortium. She is also a former visiting professor at Peking University and currently an adjunct professor at New York University where she teaches macroeconomics and financial derivatives. She consults with policymakers from Europe, Asia, Latin America, and the U.S. about U.S.-China relations, international finance and trade, and China’s political economy.
In addition to numerous television and radio appearances, Dr. Lee’s op-eds have appeared in major publications in the United States and Asia.
A former investment banker in high yield bonds and technology stocks, as well as a partner and credit derivatives trader in two multi-billion dollar hedge fund firms, she is also the author of the book What the U.S. Can Learn from China, an award winning international bestseller. She is an active member of the Authors Guild and the Pen AmericaSociety.
Dr. Lee attended U.C. Berkeley, Princeton University’s Woodrow Wilson School of International Affairs, and Harvard Business School.

Help us reach 50,000 subscribers! SUBSCRIBE to our channel and suggest our channel to friends and family.
Special thanks to this month's sponsor: Walter and PatriciaSouth of New York City. Walter is a frequent visitor to our recordings and a great friend of the show. Thank you from me and everyone here at Democracy at Work. We do need sponsors for the New Year, you can sponsor by visiting: democracyatwork.info/sponsor
"China’sEconomy Now, Its Growth and Global Impact"
with Richard D. Wolff
Co-sponsored by Democracy at Work,
LeftForum & Judson Memorial Church
Wednesday, November 8th 2017 at 7:30pm
Judson Memorial Church at Washington Square
These programs begin with 30 minutes of short updates on important economic events of the last month, then Wolff analyzes several major economic issues. This month, these issues will include:
1. Monopolies proliferating with dangerous economic consequences
2. 21 st century socialism and worker cooperatives
3. Catalonia: nationalism and capitalism
Our goal: To develop all participants’ understanding and ability to explain current economic events and trends to others. We open the floor to questions and comments when time permits.

Why is Chinese economy slowing? - Inside Story

Countries around the globe are nervously watching what is happening to the Chinese economy - and fear the potential knock on effects.
New government statistics say China'sGDP grew last year by almost seven percent - many other countries would be delighted by that.
But its the lowest growth for 25 years - and another sign that the heady days of record-breaking economic expansion are long gone.
The true situation could be even worse - some analysts do not believe the official data.
As the world's second biggest economy again stalls, countries which export commodities such as oil and iron ore to China are suffering - with the possibility of worse to come.
So, what has gone wrong? And should the world be concerned?
Presenter: Sami Zeidan
Guests:
PaulineLoong - Managing director of Asia-Analytica and analyst on China's political economy
Chris Watling - Chief market strategist at Longview Economics.
Michele Geraci - Professor of finance at Zhejian University and an economic adviser to governments, corporations and investors in China
- Subscribe to our channel http://bit.ly/AJSubscribe
- Follow us on Twitter https://twitter.com/AJEnglish
- Find us on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/aljazeera
- Check our website: http://www.aljazeera.com/

16:37

China's Economy: On the Brink of Catastrophe

China's Economy: On the Brink of Catastrophe

China's Economy: On the Brink of Catastrophe

Though China has had one of the strongest economies for the past decade, much of this growth has been fueled by more and more debt. Over time, more and more debt has been required, to elicit the same response in the economy. Eventually, this entire system will come crashing down, sending shockwaves around the world.
Support my work on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/silverfortune
Or... Support my channel by buying silver that you were going to buy anyways! 10 oz. silver bar at spot at SD Bullion (must be logged in for code to work): https://sdbullion.com/sf

59:06

Arthur Kroeber: "China’s Economy: Powerhouse, Menace, or the Next Japan?"

Arthur Kroeber: "China’s Economy: Powerhouse, Menace, or the Next Japan?"

Arthur Kroeber: "China’s Economy: Powerhouse, Menace, or the Next Japan?"

Arthur Kroeber speaks about the future of China's economy at the Paulson Institute's Contemporary China Speakers Series on May 16, 2016.
In the last three decades China has surged from impoverished backwater to become the world’s second-biggest economy and largest trading nation. Yet as the recent tumult on global markets shows, China risks destabilizing the world as it makes the hard shift from an investment-driven to a consumer-oriented economy. The headwinds of a rapidly aging population, a battle against rampant corruption and an enormous national debt are also slowing the country’s growth. Will China mature into a global economic leader, trigger a crisis, or stagnate like Japan? Arthur Kroeber, one of the world’s leading commentators on the Chinese economy, tackles these tough questions.
Arthur R. Kroeber is head of research at Gavekal, a financial-services firm based in Hong Kong, founder of the China-focused Gavekal Dragonomics research service, and editor of China Economic Quarterly. He divides his time between Beijing and New York. Before founding Dragonomics in 2002, he spent fifteen years as a financial and economic journalist in China and South Asia. He is a senior non-resident fellow of the Brookings-Tsinghua Center, an adjunct professor at the Columbia UniversitySchool of International and Public Affairs, and a member of the National Committee on US-China Relations. His book "China’sEconomy: What Everyone Needs to Know" was published by Oxford University Press in April 2016.

13:44

Insight: The State of China’s Economy

Insight: The State of China’s Economy

Insight: The State of China’s Economy

What’s next for China?
As rumours amass regarding the future of Xi Jinping, we look at how the country has developed under his leadership and what is on the horizon for the world’s second largest economy.
Subscribe: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC7fWeaHhqgM4Ry-RMpM2YYw?sub_confirmation=1
Livestream: http://www.youtube.com/c/trtworld/live
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Twitter: https://twitter.com/TRTWorld
Visit our website: http://www.trtworld.com/

28:08

Is the Chinese economy heading for collapse in the near future?

Is the Chinese economy heading for collapse in the near future?

Is the Chinese economy heading for collapse in the near future?

Globalization has brought China closer to other countries than ever before. A healthy Chinese economy means way more than China itself. How firm of a footing is China’s economy on? Is it heading to some kind of crisis that some people contained?
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1:20:46

Understanding the Chinese Economy: Where Is It Headed?

Understanding the Chinese Economy: Where Is It Headed?

Understanding the Chinese Economy: Where Is It Headed?

Is China heading for a crash? China’s economy inspires extreme and, often, diametrically opposed views. Bears: growth is severely unbalanced, waste unbearably high, and collapse nigh; massive stock market crashes, weakening manufacturing, and devaluation of the Chinese currency are all risk factors. Bulls: past performance is proof of the government’s managerial skill, innovation is blossoming and China will soon surpass America as the global economic powerhouse. Can we go beyond the conventional wisdom?
Arthur R. Kroeber is founding partner of Gavekal Dragonomics, a China-focused economic research consultancy he helped establish in Beijing in 2002 after 15 years as a freelance financial journalist in Asia, and editor of its flagship publication China Economic Quarterly. He is also head of research at the parent company Gavekal, a financial services firm based in Hong Kong, where he advises financial, corporate and government clients on economic and political developments in China. Arthur has just published a new book, “China’sEconomy: What Everyone Needs to Know”, earlier in 2016 (https://china-economy-book.com/). Arthur is a senior non-resident fellow of the Brookings-Tsinghua Center for Public Policy, adjunct professor at Columbia University’s School of International and Public Affairs, and a member of the National Committee on US-China Relations. He lives in Beijing and New York.
Joe Studwell is the founding editor of the “China Economic Quarterly”. Since 1997 the China Economic Quarterly has been the leading source of analysis and understanding of the Chinese economy for business leaders, diplomats, academics and other China-watchers. Joe has contributed to the Economist, Financial Times, Asian Wall Street Journal, Far Eastern Economic Review, and many other publications. Previous books include “How Asia Asian Godfathers” (2007, about developmental failure in south-east Asia) which sold over 16,000 copies for Profile and “The China Dream” (2002, about the 1990s foreign investment gold rush in China), and “How Asia Works” (2013, an explication of economic development across the east Asian region). Visit his blog (https://joestudwell.wordpress.com/about/) for interesting updates.
This lecture was recorded on 21st November 2016 at MillLane Lecture Site, University of Cambridge.
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Trump unplugging Chinese banks will end China’s economy: Gordon Chang

CHINA ECONOMY 2017

It has been a volatile year, but China maintained stable growth and improved its quality and efficiency. As the year 2017 approaches the end, our own Guan Xin reviewed the performance of China's economy.
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7:34

8 Reasons Why The Economy Of China Will Collapse

8 Reasons Why The Economy Of China Will Collapse

8 Reasons Why The Economy Of China Will Collapse

China might be the largest economy in the world by 2020. But will that really happen? Or will the Chinese economy collapse soon? There are many indicators showing that there is a significant risk that China will lose its position as the economic engine of the world during the next few years. Do you agree?

Yukon Huang: Debunking Myths About China's Economy

China’s rapid growth and transition towards a more market-oriented economic system have encouraged spectators to predict massive changes to the Chinese political and social system. However, while growth is slowing, the economy remains sound and the Chinese Communist Party emerged from the 19th Party Congress with its strongest leader in years. What makes experts forecast again and again that China is on the verge of collapse? Yukon Huang, former Country Director for China at the World Bank, cuts through the myths and joins us to discuss his new book, "Cracking the China Conundrum: Why Conventional Economic Wisdom is Wrong." His in-depth analysis explores the varied dynamics at play in China’s economic growth today and sheds light on why so many China watchers have gotten it wrong.
SPEAKER...

published: 01 Dec 2017

Why is the CHINESE Economy ADDICTED to DEBT? - VisualPolitik EN

We can´t hide it, here at VisualPolitik we love Asia, and that’s partly because, we believe that the world’s centre is already on this continent. But in the last few decades, one country has stood out of the crowd, and that is China.
China has faced two major threats in the last years: less growth and much, much, more debt. In fact, this has even lead to an important question: Can China go bankrupt? Well, that's what we'll be talking in today's video!
And don't forget to visit our friend’s podcast, ReconsiderMedia:
http://www.reconsidermedia.com/
Some related articles:
BigRatingsFirmsStronger Than Ever - https://www.wsj.com/articles/what-crisis-big-ratings-firms-stronger-than-ever-1457655084
ChineseGhost towns - http://www.businessinsider.com/these-chinese-cities-are-ghost-towns-2...

published: 29 Jun 2017

Tyler Cowen: The Rise and Fall of the Chinese Economy

A very poor country turned modern economy, China is now facing economic hardship. How did this happen? What led to its astonishing economic growth and what’s fueling its current woes? JoinTyler Cowen as he dives into the rise and fall of China’s economy.
Many of China’s current problems are rooted deep in the country's economic history. We start our discussion in 1979 when Chinese reformers introduced the concept of private property and more capitalistic incentives, privatized agriculture, and allowed for more manufacturing and exporting — all of which put China’s economy on an upward trajectory.
Along with these reforms came transformational growth. For much of the past 35 years, China’s GDP per capita has grown at about 10% per year. In other words, living standards in China doubled a...

published: 21 Oct 2015

China economy is FAILING- bankruptcy ahead?

China can not develop its own technologies? It can not innovate fast enough?
The debt is too high and government can not cope with it.
Foreign countries block Chinese investment and strategy to get ownership over ressources and buy foreign technologies.
PATREON: https://www.patreon.com/chinanonstop

published: 23 Feb 2018

Here's Why China's Economy Will Be So Hard to Fix

China’s leaders have a mammoth task steering the world’s second largest economy out of its current slowdown. This QuickTake examines the challenges they face.
Like this video? Subscribe to Bloomberg on YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/Bloomberg?sub_confirmation=1
And subscribe to Bloomberg Politics for the latest political news:
http://www.youtube.com/BloombergPolitics?sub_confirmation=1
Bloomberg is the FirstWord in business news, delivering breaking news & analysis, up-to-the-minute market data, features, profiles and more: http://www.bloomberg.com
Connect with us on...
Twitter: https://twitter.com/business
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/bloombergbusiness
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/bloombergbusiness/
Bloomberg Television brings you coverage of the biggest business st...

published: 07 Jun 2016

Is China's economy in good shape? Not really... | Xander Snyder Interview

China Documentary: How China Dominated The World's Economy

ChinaDocumentary: How China Dominated The World's Economy
China, officially the People's Republic of China (PRC), is a sovereign state in East Asia. With a population of over 1.381 billion, it is the world's most populous state.
China's socialist market economy is the world's second largest economy by nominal GDP, and the world's largest economy by purchasing power parity according to the IMF, although China's National Bureau of Statistics rejects this claim. Until 2015 China was the world's fastest-growing major economy, with growth rates averaging 10% over 30 years. Due to historical and political facts of China's developing economy, China's public sector accounts for a bigger share of the national economy than the burgeoning private sector.
China is a global hub for manufacturing, ...

The Rise of China Mini-Documentary | Episode 1 | China's Economic Miracle
Two centuries ago, Napoleon warned, “Let China sleep: when she wakes, she will shake the world.”
The rise of China will undoubtedly be one of the great dramas of the twenty-first century. China's extraordinary economic growth and active diplomacy are already transforming East Asia, and future decades will see even greater increases in Chinese power and influence.
In this episode we will look only at the sheer size of China today. We will then look at it’s threats, challenges and confrontations with America in future episodes.
In 1980, China’s gross domestic product (GDP) was less than 300 billion dollars; by 2015, it was 11 trillion dollars—making it the world’s second-largest economy by market exchange rates. C...

published: 11 Sep 2017

Will China's Economy Collapse? with Ann Lee

For more programming, please visit: http://www.ncuscr.org.
In a new book, Will China’sEconomyCollapse? New York UniversityAdjunct ProfessorAnn Lee addresses a key question that China watchers and economists have been asking for more than two decades. Between ballooning debt to GDP ratios, overinvestment in the property market, and industrial overcapacity, the uneven structure of China’s economic growth provides plenty of reasons for concern. Yet so far, China’s unique blend of state-led and laissez-faire capitalism has proved remarkably strong, defying numerous predictions of imminent economic catastrophe. In her book, Professor Lee examines why China’s economy might be more resilient than commonly presumed, and provides a careful analysis of its strengths and weaknesses. She also add...

Why is Chinese economy slowing? - Inside Story

Countries around the globe are nervously watching what is happening to the Chinese economy - and fear the potential knock on effects.
New government statistics say China'sGDP grew last year by almost seven percent - many other countries would be delighted by that.
But its the lowest growth for 25 years - and another sign that the heady days of record-breaking economic expansion are long gone.
The true situation could be even worse - some analysts do not believe the official data.
As the world's second biggest economy again stalls, countries which export commodities such as oil and iron ore to China are suffering - with the possibility of worse to come.
So, what has gone wrong? And should the world be concerned?
Presenter: Sami Zeidan
Guests:
PaulineLoong - Managing director of As...

published: 19 Jan 2016

China's Economy: On the Brink of Catastrophe

Though China has had one of the strongest economies for the past decade, much of this growth has been fueled by more and more debt. Over time, more and more debt has been required, to elicit the same response in the economy. Eventually, this entire system will come crashing down, sending shockwaves around the world.
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published: 27 Oct 2017

Arthur Kroeber: "China’s Economy: Powerhouse, Menace, or the Next Japan?"

Arthur Kroeber speaks about the future of China's economy at the Paulson Institute's Contemporary China Speakers Series on May 16, 2016.
In the last three decades China has surged from impoverished backwater to become the world’s second-biggest economy and largest trading nation. Yet as the recent tumult on global markets shows, China risks destabilizing the world as it makes the hard shift from an investment-driven to a consumer-oriented economy. The headwinds of a rapidly aging population, a battle against rampant corruption and an enormous national debt are also slowing the country’s growth. Will China mature into a global economic leader, trigger a crisis, or stagnate like Japan? Arthur Kroeber, one of the world’s leading commentators on the Chinese economy, tackles these tough questi...

published: 07 Jun 2016

Insight: The State of China’s Economy

What’s next for China?
As rumours amass regarding the future of Xi Jinping, we look at how the country has developed under his leadership and what is on the horizon for the world’s second largest economy.
Subscribe: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC7fWeaHhqgM4Ry-RMpM2YYw?sub_confirmation=1
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published: 25 Oct 2016

Is the Chinese economy heading for collapse in the near future?

Globalization has brought China closer to other countries than ever before. A healthy Chinese economy means way more than China itself. How firm of a footing is China’s economy on? Is it heading to some kind of crisis that some people contained?
Subscribe to us on YouTube: https://goo.gl/lP12gA
Download our APP on Apple Store (iOS): https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/cctvnews-app/id922456579?l=zh&ls=1&mt=8
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published: 14 Oct 2017

Understanding the Chinese Economy: Where Is It Headed?

Is China heading for a crash? China’s economy inspires extreme and, often, diametrically opposed views. Bears: growth is severely unbalanced, waste unbearably high, and collapse nigh; massive stock market crashes, weakening manufacturing, and devaluation of the Chinese currency are all risk factors. Bulls: past performance is proof of the government’s managerial skill, innovation is blossoming and China will soon surpass America as the global economic powerhouse. Can we go beyond the conventional wisdom?
Arthur R. Kroeber is founding partner of Gavekal Dragonomics, a China-focused economic research consultancy he helped establish in Beijing in 2002 after 15 years as a freelance financial journalist in Asia, and editor of its flagship publication China Economic Quarterly. He is also head ...

Trump unplugging Chinese banks will end China’s economy: Gordon Chang

CHINA ECONOMY 2017

It has been a volatile year, but China maintained stable growth and improved its quality and efficiency. As the year 2017 approaches the end, our own Guan Xin reviewed the performance of China's economy.
Subscribe to us on YouTube: https://goo.gl/lP12gA
Download our APP on Apple Store (iOS): https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/cctvnews-app/id922456579?l=zh&ls=1&mt=8
Download our APP on Google Play (Android): https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.imib.cctv
Follow us on:
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published: 25 Dec 2017

8 Reasons Why The Economy Of China Will Collapse

China might be the largest economy in the world by 2020. But will that really happen? Or will the Chinese economy collapse soon? There are many indicators showing that there is a significant risk that China will lose its position as the economic engine of the world during the next few years. Do you agree?

Why is the CHINESE Economy ADDICTED to DEBT? - VisualPolitik EN

We can´t hide it, here at VisualPolitik we love Asia, and that’s partly because, we believe that the world’s centre is already on this continent. But in the las...

We can´t hide it, here at VisualPolitik we love Asia, and that’s partly because, we believe that the world’s centre is already on this continent. But in the last few decades, one country has stood out of the crowd, and that is China.
China has faced two major threats in the last years: less growth and much, much, more debt. In fact, this has even lead to an important question: Can China go bankrupt? Well, that's what we'll be talking in today's video!
And don't forget to visit our friend’s podcast, ReconsiderMedia:
http://www.reconsidermedia.com/
Some related articles:
BigRatingsFirmsStronger Than Ever - https://www.wsj.com/articles/what-crisis-big-ratings-firms-stronger-than-ever-1457655084
ChineseGhost towns - http://www.businessinsider.com/these-chinese-cities-are-ghost-towns-2017-4
China overcapacity 'wreaking far-reaching damage' - http://www.dw.com/en/china-overcapacity-wreaking-far-reaching-damage/a-19060913
Why China’sGrowingDebtLoad Worries the World? -
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/05/24/business/china-downgrade-explained.html

We can´t hide it, here at VisualPolitik we love Asia, and that’s partly because, we believe that the world’s centre is already on this continent. But in the last few decades, one country has stood out of the crowd, and that is China.
China has faced two major threats in the last years: less growth and much, much, more debt. In fact, this has even lead to an important question: Can China go bankrupt? Well, that's what we'll be talking in today's video!
And don't forget to visit our friend’s podcast, ReconsiderMedia:
http://www.reconsidermedia.com/
Some related articles:
BigRatingsFirmsStronger Than Ever - https://www.wsj.com/articles/what-crisis-big-ratings-firms-stronger-than-ever-1457655084
ChineseGhost towns - http://www.businessinsider.com/these-chinese-cities-are-ghost-towns-2017-4
China overcapacity 'wreaking far-reaching damage' - http://www.dw.com/en/china-overcapacity-wreaking-far-reaching-damage/a-19060913
Why China’sGrowingDebtLoad Worries the World? -
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/05/24/business/china-downgrade-explained.html

Tyler Cowen: The Rise and Fall of the Chinese Economy

A very poor country turned modern economy, China is now facing economic hardship. How did this happen? What led to its astonishing economic growth and what’s fu...

A very poor country turned modern economy, China is now facing economic hardship. How did this happen? What led to its astonishing economic growth and what’s fueling its current woes? JoinTyler Cowen as he dives into the rise and fall of China’s economy.
Many of China’s current problems are rooted deep in the country's economic history. We start our discussion in 1979 when Chinese reformers introduced the concept of private property and more capitalistic incentives, privatized agriculture, and allowed for more manufacturing and exporting — all of which put China’s economy on an upward trajectory.
Along with these reforms came transformational growth. For much of the past 35 years, China’s GDP per capita has grown at about 10% per year. In other words, living standards in China doubled about every seven years.
What did the economy look like during these periods of rapid growth? High levels of savings and high levels of investment, especially in infrastructure projects. China’s economy required more complex investments too — in health care and and start-ups, for example.
A turning point for the Chinese economy came in 2009. With the recession affecting many other countries, China’s government took steps to avoid the recession and keep the economy afloat, but at a cost. Debt skyrocketed during the period, which is proving less sustainable as China’s rate of growth declines.
There’s some discrepancy over China’s current growth rate — the Chinese government claims 7% per year, but external observers predict this rate is much lower, and that China is now entering a recession. To gain a better understanding, we take a look at five specific areas in this video: the real estate bubble, the stock market bubble, the excess level of municipal debt, the excess capacity among Chinese businesses, and the risk of capital flight. When you consider all of these areas together, it paints a very complex picture and one which is proving difficult for China to manage.
Even still, there are reasons to remain optimistic. China has invested tremendously in human capital, which is one of the most valuable assets to any modern economy. These investments in human capital will certainly survive the current recession and help facilitate a bright economic future.
Ask a question about the video: http://bit.ly/1pprkc8
Learn more about China's economy with these resources: http://bit.ly/1LXkCi9
What should Tyler Cowen cover in his next video? Vote or submit your idea here: http://bit.ly/1ppr1Os
Everyday Economics course page: http://bit.ly/21KO9Vq
Help us caption & translate this video!
http://amara.org/v/HQ0d/

A very poor country turned modern economy, China is now facing economic hardship. How did this happen? What led to its astonishing economic growth and what’s fueling its current woes? JoinTyler Cowen as he dives into the rise and fall of China’s economy.
Many of China’s current problems are rooted deep in the country's economic history. We start our discussion in 1979 when Chinese reformers introduced the concept of private property and more capitalistic incentives, privatized agriculture, and allowed for more manufacturing and exporting — all of which put China’s economy on an upward trajectory.
Along with these reforms came transformational growth. For much of the past 35 years, China’s GDP per capita has grown at about 10% per year. In other words, living standards in China doubled about every seven years.
What did the economy look like during these periods of rapid growth? High levels of savings and high levels of investment, especially in infrastructure projects. China’s economy required more complex investments too — in health care and and start-ups, for example.
A turning point for the Chinese economy came in 2009. With the recession affecting many other countries, China’s government took steps to avoid the recession and keep the economy afloat, but at a cost. Debt skyrocketed during the period, which is proving less sustainable as China’s rate of growth declines.
There’s some discrepancy over China’s current growth rate — the Chinese government claims 7% per year, but external observers predict this rate is much lower, and that China is now entering a recession. To gain a better understanding, we take a look at five specific areas in this video: the real estate bubble, the stock market bubble, the excess level of municipal debt, the excess capacity among Chinese businesses, and the risk of capital flight. When you consider all of these areas together, it paints a very complex picture and one which is proving difficult for China to manage.
Even still, there are reasons to remain optimistic. China has invested tremendously in human capital, which is one of the most valuable assets to any modern economy. These investments in human capital will certainly survive the current recession and help facilitate a bright economic future.
Ask a question about the video: http://bit.ly/1pprkc8
Learn more about China's economy with these resources: http://bit.ly/1LXkCi9
What should Tyler Cowen cover in his next video? Vote or submit your idea here: http://bit.ly/1ppr1Os
Everyday Economics course page: http://bit.ly/21KO9Vq
Help us caption & translate this video!
http://amara.org/v/HQ0d/

China economy is FAILING- bankruptcy ahead?

China can not develop its own technologies? It can not innovate fast enough?
The debt is too high and government can not cope with it.
Foreign countries block C...

China can not develop its own technologies? It can not innovate fast enough?
The debt is too high and government can not cope with it.
Foreign countries block Chinese investment and strategy to get ownership over ressources and buy foreign technologies.
PATREON: https://www.patreon.com/chinanonstop

China can not develop its own technologies? It can not innovate fast enough?
The debt is too high and government can not cope with it.
Foreign countries block Chinese investment and strategy to get ownership over ressources and buy foreign technologies.
PATREON: https://www.patreon.com/chinanonstop

Here's Why China's Economy Will Be So Hard to Fix

China’s leaders have a mammoth task steering the world’s second largest economy out of its current slowdown. This QuickTake examines the challenges they face.
...

China’s leaders have a mammoth task steering the world’s second largest economy out of its current slowdown. This QuickTake examines the challenges they face.
Like this video? Subscribe to Bloomberg on YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/Bloomberg?sub_confirmation=1
And subscribe to Bloomberg Politics for the latest political news:
http://www.youtube.com/BloombergPolitics?sub_confirmation=1
Bloomberg is the FirstWord in business news, delivering breaking news & analysis, up-to-the-minute market data, features, profiles and more: http://www.bloomberg.com
Connect with us on...
Twitter: https://twitter.com/business
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Bloomberg Television brings you coverage of the biggest business stories and exclusive interviews with newsmakers, 24 hours a day: http://www.bloomberg.com/live
Connect with us on...
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Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/bloombergtv

China’s leaders have a mammoth task steering the world’s second largest economy out of its current slowdown. This QuickTake examines the challenges they face.
Like this video? Subscribe to Bloomberg on YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/Bloomberg?sub_confirmation=1
And subscribe to Bloomberg Politics for the latest political news:
http://www.youtube.com/BloombergPolitics?sub_confirmation=1
Bloomberg is the FirstWord in business news, delivering breaking news & analysis, up-to-the-minute market data, features, profiles and more: http://www.bloomberg.com
Connect with us on...
Twitter: https://twitter.com/business
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/bloombergbusiness
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Bloomberg Television brings you coverage of the biggest business stories and exclusive interviews with newsmakers, 24 hours a day: http://www.bloomberg.com/live
Connect with us on...
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published:07 Jun 2016

views:811437

back

Is China's economy in good shape? Not really... | Xander Snyder Interview

ChinaDocumentary: How China Dominated The World's Economy
China, officially the People's Republic of China (PRC), is a sovereign state in East Asia. With a population of over 1.381 billion, it is the world's most populous state.
China's socialist market economy is the world's second largest economy by nominal GDP, and the world's largest economy by purchasing power parity according to the IMF, although China's National Bureau of Statistics rejects this claim. Until 2015 China was the world's fastest-growing major economy, with growth rates averaging 10% over 30 years. Due to historical and political facts of China's developing economy, China's public sector accounts for a bigger share of the national economy than the burgeoning private sector.
China is a global hub for manufacturing, and is the largest manufacturing economy in the world as well as the largest exporter of goods in the world. China is also the world's fastest growing consumer market and second largest importer of goods in the world. China is a net importer of services products.
Watch More: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCgPmFlw7U0VgUFIkWBDpZSg
Sources:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economy_of_China
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/China

ChinaDocumentary: How China Dominated The World's Economy
China, officially the People's Republic of China (PRC), is a sovereign state in East Asia. With a population of over 1.381 billion, it is the world's most populous state.
China's socialist market economy is the world's second largest economy by nominal GDP, and the world's largest economy by purchasing power parity according to the IMF, although China's National Bureau of Statistics rejects this claim. Until 2015 China was the world's fastest-growing major economy, with growth rates averaging 10% over 30 years. Due to historical and political facts of China's developing economy, China's public sector accounts for a bigger share of the national economy than the burgeoning private sector.
China is a global hub for manufacturing, and is the largest manufacturing economy in the world as well as the largest exporter of goods in the world. China is also the world's fastest growing consumer market and second largest importer of goods in the world. China is a net importer of services products.
Watch More: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCgPmFlw7U0VgUFIkWBDpZSg
Sources:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economy_of_China
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/China

The Rise of China Mini-Documentary | Episode 1 | China's Economic Miracle
Two centuries ago, Napoleon warned, “Let China sleep: when she wakes, she will shake the world.”
The rise of China will undoubtedly be one of the great dramas of the twenty-first century. China's extraordinary economic growth and active diplomacy are already transforming East Asia, and future decades will see even greater increases in Chinese power and influence.
In this episode we will look only at the sheer size of China today. We will then look at it’s threats, challenges and confrontations with America in future episodes.
In 1980, China’s gross domestic product (GDP) was less than 300 billion dollars; by 2015, it was 11 trillion dollars—making it the world’s second-largest economy by market exchange rates. China’s trade with the outside world in 1980 amounted to less than 40 billion dollars; by 2015, it had increased one hundredfold, to a whopping 4 trillion dollars.
Even at its lower growth rate in 2015, China’s economy created a Greece every sixteen weeks and an Israel every twenty-five weeks.
Measured by purchasing power parity, which measures how many aircraft, missiles, ships, sailors, pilots, drones, bases, and other military- related items a state can buy and the prices it has to pay in its own national currency, China has not only surpassed the US, but also now accounts for roughly 18 percent of world GDP, compared to just 2 percent in 1980.
By 2005, the country was building the square-foot equivalent of today’s Rome every two weeks.
Between 2011 and 2013, China both produced and used more cement than US did in the entire twentieth century.
On its current path, China will surpass the US to become the world leader in research-and-development spending by 2019.
Since June 2013, the world’s fastest supercomputer has been located not in Silicon Valley but in China. Indeed, in the rankings of the world’s 500 fastest supercomputers—a list from which China was absent in 2001—today it has 167, two more than the United States. Moreover, China’s top supercomputer is five times faster than the closest American competitor. And while China’s supercomputers previously relied heavily on American processors, its top computer in 2016 was built entirely with domestic processors.
As China’s economy has gotten bigger, its guns and tanks—and their twenty-first-century equivalents—have gotten better, and allowed for a new level of competition with other great powers, especially the United States. Just as technology start-ups like Facebook and Uber have used the concept of disruptive innovation to upend previously dominant firms, the Chinese military is developing new technologies that can counter ships, planes, and satellites that the US has developed over decades—and for a fraction of the cost.
China has increased its defense spending nearly fivefold over the last decade. China currently spends more on defense than Japan, South Korea, the Philippines, and Vietnam combined, and China’s military spending is second only to the United States.
China is now building a Blue Water navy. A Blue Water navy patrols the oceans. It will take another thirty years (assuming economic progression) for China to build naval capacity to seriously challenge the most powerful seaborne force the world has ever seen – the US navy. But in the medium to short term, as it builds, and trains, and learns, the Chinese navy will bump up against its rivals in the seas; and how those bumps are managed will define great power politics in this century.
China intends to become a two-ocean power (Pacific and Indian). To achieve this China is investing in deep-water ports in Burma, Bangladesh, Pakistan and Sri Lanka – an investment which buys it good relations, the potential for its future navy to have friendly bases to visit or reside in, and trade links back home.
In 2014, China inaugurated a major international economic development program by financing infrastructure projects in the historical silk route countries. It is engaged in financing economic infrastructure projects in the silk route countries with positive ROI for China and the recipient countries.
The Chinese are also building ports in Kenya, railway lines in Angola, and a hydroelectric dam in Ethiopia. They are scouring the length and breadth of the whole of Africa for minerals and precious metals.
Don't forget to subscribe to our YouTube ChannelSign up to our website and submit video suggestions:
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The Rise of China Mini-Documentary | Episode 1 | China's Economic Miracle
Two centuries ago, Napoleon warned, “Let China sleep: when she wakes, she will shake the world.”
The rise of China will undoubtedly be one of the great dramas of the twenty-first century. China's extraordinary economic growth and active diplomacy are already transforming East Asia, and future decades will see even greater increases in Chinese power and influence.
In this episode we will look only at the sheer size of China today. We will then look at it’s threats, challenges and confrontations with America in future episodes.
In 1980, China’s gross domestic product (GDP) was less than 300 billion dollars; by 2015, it was 11 trillion dollars—making it the world’s second-largest economy by market exchange rates. China’s trade with the outside world in 1980 amounted to less than 40 billion dollars; by 2015, it had increased one hundredfold, to a whopping 4 trillion dollars.
Even at its lower growth rate in 2015, China’s economy created a Greece every sixteen weeks and an Israel every twenty-five weeks.
Measured by purchasing power parity, which measures how many aircraft, missiles, ships, sailors, pilots, drones, bases, and other military- related items a state can buy and the prices it has to pay in its own national currency, China has not only surpassed the US, but also now accounts for roughly 18 percent of world GDP, compared to just 2 percent in 1980.
By 2005, the country was building the square-foot equivalent of today’s Rome every two weeks.
Between 2011 and 2013, China both produced and used more cement than US did in the entire twentieth century.
On its current path, China will surpass the US to become the world leader in research-and-development spending by 2019.
Since June 2013, the world’s fastest supercomputer has been located not in Silicon Valley but in China. Indeed, in the rankings of the world’s 500 fastest supercomputers—a list from which China was absent in 2001—today it has 167, two more than the United States. Moreover, China’s top supercomputer is five times faster than the closest American competitor. And while China’s supercomputers previously relied heavily on American processors, its top computer in 2016 was built entirely with domestic processors.
As China’s economy has gotten bigger, its guns and tanks—and their twenty-first-century equivalents—have gotten better, and allowed for a new level of competition with other great powers, especially the United States. Just as technology start-ups like Facebook and Uber have used the concept of disruptive innovation to upend previously dominant firms, the Chinese military is developing new technologies that can counter ships, planes, and satellites that the US has developed over decades—and for a fraction of the cost.
China has increased its defense spending nearly fivefold over the last decade. China currently spends more on defense than Japan, South Korea, the Philippines, and Vietnam combined, and China’s military spending is second only to the United States.
China is now building a Blue Water navy. A Blue Water navy patrols the oceans. It will take another thirty years (assuming economic progression) for China to build naval capacity to seriously challenge the most powerful seaborne force the world has ever seen – the US navy. But in the medium to short term, as it builds, and trains, and learns, the Chinese navy will bump up against its rivals in the seas; and how those bumps are managed will define great power politics in this century.
China intends to become a two-ocean power (Pacific and Indian). To achieve this China is investing in deep-water ports in Burma, Bangladesh, Pakistan and Sri Lanka – an investment which buys it good relations, the potential for its future navy to have friendly bases to visit or reside in, and trade links back home.
In 2014, China inaugurated a major international economic development program by financing infrastructure projects in the historical silk route countries. It is engaged in financing economic infrastructure projects in the silk route countries with positive ROI for China and the recipient countries.
The Chinese are also building ports in Kenya, railway lines in Angola, and a hydroelectric dam in Ethiopia. They are scouring the length and breadth of the whole of Africa for minerals and precious metals.
Don't forget to subscribe to our YouTube ChannelSign up to our website and submit video suggestions:
www.kjvids.co.uk
Like our Facebook page for exclusive updates:
https://www.facebook.com/KJVids
Follow us on Twitter to be informed when we post:
https://twitter.com/kjvids2016
Support our content by becoming a KJ Patreon
https://www.patreon.com/kjvids
All Rights Reserved. Contact info@kjvids.co.uk if you are interested in licensing our content, advertising or working with us in other ways.

For more programming, please visit: http://www.ncuscr.org.
In a new book, Will China’sEconomyCollapse? New York UniversityAdjunct ProfessorAnn Lee addresses a key question that China watchers and economists have been asking for more than two decades. Between ballooning debt to GDP ratios, overinvestment in the property market, and industrial overcapacity, the uneven structure of China’s economic growth provides plenty of reasons for concern. Yet so far, China’s unique blend of state-led and laissez-faire capitalism has proved remarkably strong, defying numerous predictions of imminent economic catastrophe. In her book, Professor Lee examines why China’s economy might be more resilient than commonly presumed, and provides a careful analysis of its strengths and weaknesses. She also addresses the implications for other capitalist societies around the world and offers advice to policy makers about what changes must occur to ensure continued global stability and prosperity. Professor Lee discussed her book, China’s economic outlook, and the future of global capitalism on February 7, 2018.
Ann Lee is an internationally recognized authority on China’s economic relations and the CEO of Coterie, a new technology investment consortium. She is also a former visiting professor at Peking University and currently an adjunct professor at New York University where she teaches macroeconomics and financial derivatives. She consults with policymakers from Europe, Asia, Latin America, and the U.S. about U.S.-China relations, international finance and trade, and China’s political economy.
In addition to numerous television and radio appearances, Dr. Lee’s op-eds have appeared in major publications in the United States and Asia.
A former investment banker in high yield bonds and technology stocks, as well as a partner and credit derivatives trader in two multi-billion dollar hedge fund firms, she is also the author of the book What the U.S. Can Learn from China, an award winning international bestseller. She is an active member of the Authors Guild and the Pen AmericaSociety.
Dr. Lee attended U.C. Berkeley, Princeton University’s Woodrow Wilson School of International Affairs, and Harvard Business School.

For more programming, please visit: http://www.ncuscr.org.
In a new book, Will China’sEconomyCollapse? New York UniversityAdjunct ProfessorAnn Lee addresses a key question that China watchers and economists have been asking for more than two decades. Between ballooning debt to GDP ratios, overinvestment in the property market, and industrial overcapacity, the uneven structure of China’s economic growth provides plenty of reasons for concern. Yet so far, China’s unique blend of state-led and laissez-faire capitalism has proved remarkably strong, defying numerous predictions of imminent economic catastrophe. In her book, Professor Lee examines why China’s economy might be more resilient than commonly presumed, and provides a careful analysis of its strengths and weaknesses. She also addresses the implications for other capitalist societies around the world and offers advice to policy makers about what changes must occur to ensure continued global stability and prosperity. Professor Lee discussed her book, China’s economic outlook, and the future of global capitalism on February 7, 2018.
Ann Lee is an internationally recognized authority on China’s economic relations and the CEO of Coterie, a new technology investment consortium. She is also a former visiting professor at Peking University and currently an adjunct professor at New York University where she teaches macroeconomics and financial derivatives. She consults with policymakers from Europe, Asia, Latin America, and the U.S. about U.S.-China relations, international finance and trade, and China’s political economy.
In addition to numerous television and radio appearances, Dr. Lee’s op-eds have appeared in major publications in the United States and Asia.
A former investment banker in high yield bonds and technology stocks, as well as a partner and credit derivatives trader in two multi-billion dollar hedge fund firms, she is also the author of the book What the U.S. Can Learn from China, an award winning international bestseller. She is an active member of the Authors Guild and the Pen AmericaSociety.
Dr. Lee attended U.C. Berkeley, Princeton University’s Woodrow Wilson School of International Affairs, and Harvard Business School.

Help us reach 50,000 subscribers! SUBSCRIBE to our channel and suggest our channel to friends and family.
Special thanks to this month's sponsor: Walter and P...

Help us reach 50,000 subscribers! SUBSCRIBE to our channel and suggest our channel to friends and family.
Special thanks to this month's sponsor: Walter and PatriciaSouth of New York City. Walter is a frequent visitor to our recordings and a great friend of the show. Thank you from me and everyone here at Democracy at Work. We do need sponsors for the New Year, you can sponsor by visiting: democracyatwork.info/sponsor
"China’sEconomy Now, Its Growth and Global Impact"
with Richard D. Wolff
Co-sponsored by Democracy at Work,
LeftForum & Judson Memorial Church
Wednesday, November 8th 2017 at 7:30pm
Judson Memorial Church at Washington Square
These programs begin with 30 minutes of short updates on important economic events of the last month, then Wolff analyzes several major economic issues. This month, these issues will include:
1. Monopolies proliferating with dangerous economic consequences
2. 21 st century socialism and worker cooperatives
3. Catalonia: nationalism and capitalism
Our goal: To develop all participants’ understanding and ability to explain current economic events and trends to others. We open the floor to questions and comments when time permits.

Help us reach 50,000 subscribers! SUBSCRIBE to our channel and suggest our channel to friends and family.
Special thanks to this month's sponsor: Walter and PatriciaSouth of New York City. Walter is a frequent visitor to our recordings and a great friend of the show. Thank you from me and everyone here at Democracy at Work. We do need sponsors for the New Year, you can sponsor by visiting: democracyatwork.info/sponsor
"China’sEconomy Now, Its Growth and Global Impact"
with Richard D. Wolff
Co-sponsored by Democracy at Work,
LeftForum & Judson Memorial Church
Wednesday, November 8th 2017 at 7:30pm
Judson Memorial Church at Washington Square
These programs begin with 30 minutes of short updates on important economic events of the last month, then Wolff analyzes several major economic issues. This month, these issues will include:
1. Monopolies proliferating with dangerous economic consequences
2. 21 st century socialism and worker cooperatives
3. Catalonia: nationalism and capitalism
Our goal: To develop all participants’ understanding and ability to explain current economic events and trends to others. We open the floor to questions and comments when time permits.

Why is Chinese economy slowing? - Inside Story

Countries around the globe are nervously watching what is happening to the Chinese economy - and fear the potential knock on effects.
New government statistics...

Countries around the globe are nervously watching what is happening to the Chinese economy - and fear the potential knock on effects.
New government statistics say China'sGDP grew last year by almost seven percent - many other countries would be delighted by that.
But its the lowest growth for 25 years - and another sign that the heady days of record-breaking economic expansion are long gone.
The true situation could be even worse - some analysts do not believe the official data.
As the world's second biggest economy again stalls, countries which export commodities such as oil and iron ore to China are suffering - with the possibility of worse to come.
So, what has gone wrong? And should the world be concerned?
Presenter: Sami Zeidan
Guests:
PaulineLoong - Managing director of Asia-Analytica and analyst on China's political economy
Chris Watling - Chief market strategist at Longview Economics.
Michele Geraci - Professor of finance at Zhejian University and an economic adviser to governments, corporations and investors in China
- Subscribe to our channel http://bit.ly/AJSubscribe
- Follow us on Twitter https://twitter.com/AJEnglish
- Find us on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/aljazeera
- Check our website: http://www.aljazeera.com/

Countries around the globe are nervously watching what is happening to the Chinese economy - and fear the potential knock on effects.
New government statistics say China'sGDP grew last year by almost seven percent - many other countries would be delighted by that.
But its the lowest growth for 25 years - and another sign that the heady days of record-breaking economic expansion are long gone.
The true situation could be even worse - some analysts do not believe the official data.
As the world's second biggest economy again stalls, countries which export commodities such as oil and iron ore to China are suffering - with the possibility of worse to come.
So, what has gone wrong? And should the world be concerned?
Presenter: Sami Zeidan
Guests:
PaulineLoong - Managing director of Asia-Analytica and analyst on China's political economy
Chris Watling - Chief market strategist at Longview Economics.
Michele Geraci - Professor of finance at Zhejian University and an economic adviser to governments, corporations and investors in China
- Subscribe to our channel http://bit.ly/AJSubscribe
- Follow us on Twitter https://twitter.com/AJEnglish
- Find us on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/aljazeera
- Check our website: http://www.aljazeera.com/

China's Economy: On the Brink of Catastrophe

Though China has had one of the strongest economies for the past decade, much of this growth has been fueled by more and more debt. Over time, more and more de...

Though China has had one of the strongest economies for the past decade, much of this growth has been fueled by more and more debt. Over time, more and more debt has been required, to elicit the same response in the economy. Eventually, this entire system will come crashing down, sending shockwaves around the world.
Support my work on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/silverfortune
Or... Support my channel by buying silver that you were going to buy anyways! 10 oz. silver bar at spot at SD Bullion (must be logged in for code to work): https://sdbullion.com/sf

Though China has had one of the strongest economies for the past decade, much of this growth has been fueled by more and more debt. Over time, more and more debt has been required, to elicit the same response in the economy. Eventually, this entire system will come crashing down, sending shockwaves around the world.
Support my work on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/silverfortune
Or... Support my channel by buying silver that you were going to buy anyways! 10 oz. silver bar at spot at SD Bullion (must be logged in for code to work): https://sdbullion.com/sf

published:27 Oct 2017

views:4638

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Arthur Kroeber: "China’s Economy: Powerhouse, Menace, or the Next Japan?"

Arthur Kroeber speaks about the future of China's economy at the Paulson Institute's Contemporary China Speakers Series on May 16, 2016.
In the last three decades China has surged from impoverished backwater to become the world’s second-biggest economy and largest trading nation. Yet as the recent tumult on global markets shows, China risks destabilizing the world as it makes the hard shift from an investment-driven to a consumer-oriented economy. The headwinds of a rapidly aging population, a battle against rampant corruption and an enormous national debt are also slowing the country’s growth. Will China mature into a global economic leader, trigger a crisis, or stagnate like Japan? Arthur Kroeber, one of the world’s leading commentators on the Chinese economy, tackles these tough questions.
Arthur R. Kroeber is head of research at Gavekal, a financial-services firm based in Hong Kong, founder of the China-focused Gavekal Dragonomics research service, and editor of China Economic Quarterly. He divides his time between Beijing and New York. Before founding Dragonomics in 2002, he spent fifteen years as a financial and economic journalist in China and South Asia. He is a senior non-resident fellow of the Brookings-Tsinghua Center, an adjunct professor at the Columbia UniversitySchool of International and Public Affairs, and a member of the National Committee on US-China Relations. His book "China’sEconomy: What Everyone Needs to Know" was published by Oxford University Press in April 2016.

Arthur Kroeber speaks about the future of China's economy at the Paulson Institute's Contemporary China Speakers Series on May 16, 2016.
In the last three decades China has surged from impoverished backwater to become the world’s second-biggest economy and largest trading nation. Yet as the recent tumult on global markets shows, China risks destabilizing the world as it makes the hard shift from an investment-driven to a consumer-oriented economy. The headwinds of a rapidly aging population, a battle against rampant corruption and an enormous national debt are also slowing the country’s growth. Will China mature into a global economic leader, trigger a crisis, or stagnate like Japan? Arthur Kroeber, one of the world’s leading commentators on the Chinese economy, tackles these tough questions.
Arthur R. Kroeber is head of research at Gavekal, a financial-services firm based in Hong Kong, founder of the China-focused Gavekal Dragonomics research service, and editor of China Economic Quarterly. He divides his time between Beijing and New York. Before founding Dragonomics in 2002, he spent fifteen years as a financial and economic journalist in China and South Asia. He is a senior non-resident fellow of the Brookings-Tsinghua Center, an adjunct professor at the Columbia UniversitySchool of International and Public Affairs, and a member of the National Committee on US-China Relations. His book "China’sEconomy: What Everyone Needs to Know" was published by Oxford University Press in April 2016.

Insight: The State of China’s Economy

What’s next for China?
As rumours amass regarding the future of Xi Jinping, we look at how the country has developed under his leadership and what is on the...

What’s next for China?
As rumours amass regarding the future of Xi Jinping, we look at how the country has developed under his leadership and what is on the horizon for the world’s second largest economy.
Subscribe: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC7fWeaHhqgM4Ry-RMpM2YYw?sub_confirmation=1
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Visit our website: http://www.trtworld.com/

What’s next for China?
As rumours amass regarding the future of Xi Jinping, we look at how the country has developed under his leadership and what is on the horizon for the world’s second largest economy.
Subscribe: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC7fWeaHhqgM4Ry-RMpM2YYw?sub_confirmation=1
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Globalization has brought China closer to other countries than ever before. A healthy Chinese economy means way more than China itself. How firm of a footing is China’s economy on? Is it heading to some kind of crisis that some people contained?
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Globalization has brought China closer to other countries than ever before. A healthy Chinese economy means way more than China itself. How firm of a footing is China’s economy on? Is it heading to some kind of crisis that some people contained?
Subscribe to us on YouTube: https://goo.gl/lP12gA
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Is China heading for a crash? China’s economy inspires extreme and, often, diametrically opposed views. Bears: growth is severely unbalanced, waste unbearably high, and collapse nigh; massive stock market crashes, weakening manufacturing, and devaluation of the Chinese currency are all risk factors. Bulls: past performance is proof of the government’s managerial skill, innovation is blossoming and China will soon surpass America as the global economic powerhouse. Can we go beyond the conventional wisdom?
Arthur R. Kroeber is founding partner of Gavekal Dragonomics, a China-focused economic research consultancy he helped establish in Beijing in 2002 after 15 years as a freelance financial journalist in Asia, and editor of its flagship publication China Economic Quarterly. He is also head of research at the parent company Gavekal, a financial services firm based in Hong Kong, where he advises financial, corporate and government clients on economic and political developments in China. Arthur has just published a new book, “China’sEconomy: What Everyone Needs to Know”, earlier in 2016 (https://china-economy-book.com/). Arthur is a senior non-resident fellow of the Brookings-Tsinghua Center for Public Policy, adjunct professor at Columbia University’s School of International and Public Affairs, and a member of the National Committee on US-China Relations. He lives in Beijing and New York.
Joe Studwell is the founding editor of the “China Economic Quarterly”. Since 1997 the China Economic Quarterly has been the leading source of analysis and understanding of the Chinese economy for business leaders, diplomats, academics and other China-watchers. Joe has contributed to the Economist, Financial Times, Asian Wall Street Journal, Far Eastern Economic Review, and many other publications. Previous books include “How Asia Asian Godfathers” (2007, about developmental failure in south-east Asia) which sold over 16,000 copies for Profile and “The China Dream” (2002, about the 1990s foreign investment gold rush in China), and “How Asia Works” (2013, an explication of economic development across the east Asian region). Visit his blog (https://joestudwell.wordpress.com/about/) for interesting updates.
This lecture was recorded on 21st November 2016 at MillLane Lecture Site, University of Cambridge.
Want to find out more?
Like our Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/CambridgeSocietyForEconomicPluralism
Browse our website: http://www.cambridgepluralism.org/
And of course you can also subscribe to our YouTube channel!

Is China heading for a crash? China’s economy inspires extreme and, often, diametrically opposed views. Bears: growth is severely unbalanced, waste unbearably high, and collapse nigh; massive stock market crashes, weakening manufacturing, and devaluation of the Chinese currency are all risk factors. Bulls: past performance is proof of the government’s managerial skill, innovation is blossoming and China will soon surpass America as the global economic powerhouse. Can we go beyond the conventional wisdom?
Arthur R. Kroeber is founding partner of Gavekal Dragonomics, a China-focused economic research consultancy he helped establish in Beijing in 2002 after 15 years as a freelance financial journalist in Asia, and editor of its flagship publication China Economic Quarterly. He is also head of research at the parent company Gavekal, a financial services firm based in Hong Kong, where he advises financial, corporate and government clients on economic and political developments in China. Arthur has just published a new book, “China’sEconomy: What Everyone Needs to Know”, earlier in 2016 (https://china-economy-book.com/). Arthur is a senior non-resident fellow of the Brookings-Tsinghua Center for Public Policy, adjunct professor at Columbia University’s School of International and Public Affairs, and a member of the National Committee on US-China Relations. He lives in Beijing and New York.
Joe Studwell is the founding editor of the “China Economic Quarterly”. Since 1997 the China Economic Quarterly has been the leading source of analysis and understanding of the Chinese economy for business leaders, diplomats, academics and other China-watchers. Joe has contributed to the Economist, Financial Times, Asian Wall Street Journal, Far Eastern Economic Review, and many other publications. Previous books include “How Asia Asian Godfathers” (2007, about developmental failure in south-east Asia) which sold over 16,000 copies for Profile and “The China Dream” (2002, about the 1990s foreign investment gold rush in China), and “How Asia Works” (2013, an explication of economic development across the east Asian region). Visit his blog (https://joestudwell.wordpress.com/about/) for interesting updates.
This lecture was recorded on 21st November 2016 at MillLane Lecture Site, University of Cambridge.
Want to find out more?
Like our Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/CambridgeSocietyForEconomicPluralism
Browse our website: http://www.cambridgepluralism.org/
And of course you can also subscribe to our YouTube channel!

8 Reasons Why The Economy Of China Will Collapse

China might be the largest economy in the world by 2020. But will that really happen? Or will the Chinese economy collapse soon? There are many indicators showi...

China might be the largest economy in the world by 2020. But will that really happen? Or will the Chinese economy collapse soon? There are many indicators showing that there is a significant risk that China will lose its position as the economic engine of the world during the next few years. Do you agree?

China might be the largest economy in the world by 2020. But will that really happen? Or will the Chinese economy collapse soon? There are many indicators showing that there is a significant risk that China will lose its position as the economic engine of the world during the next few years. Do you agree?

Yukon Huang: Debunking Myths About China's Economy

China’s rapid growth and transition towards a more market-oriented economic system have encouraged spectators to predict massive changes to the Chinese political and social system. However, while growth is slowing, the economy remains sound and the Chinese Communist Party emerged from the 19th Party Congress with its strongest leader in years. What makes experts forecast again and again that China is on the verge of collapse? Yukon Huang, former Country Director for China at the World Bank, cuts through the myths and joins us to discuss his new book, "Cracking the China Conundrum: Why Conventional Economic Wisdom is Wrong." His in-depth analysis explores the varied dynamics at play in China’s economic growth today and sheds light on why so many China watchers have gotten it wrong.
SPEAKER...

published: 01 Dec 2017

China Documentary: How China Dominated The World's Economy

ChinaDocumentary: How China Dominated The World's Economy
China, officially the People's Republic of China (PRC), is a sovereign state in East Asia. With a population of over 1.381 billion, it is the world's most populous state.
China's socialist market economy is the world's second largest economy by nominal GDP, and the world's largest economy by purchasing power parity according to the IMF, although China's National Bureau of Statistics rejects this claim. Until 2015 China was the world's fastest-growing major economy, with growth rates averaging 10% over 30 years. Due to historical and political facts of China's developing economy, China's public sector accounts for a bigger share of the national economy than the burgeoning private sector.
China is a global hub for manufacturing, ...

published: 28 Oct 2016

Will China's Economy Collapse? with Ann Lee

For more programming, please visit: http://www.ncuscr.org.
In a new book, Will China’sEconomyCollapse? New York UniversityAdjunct ProfessorAnn Lee addresses a key question that China watchers and economists have been asking for more than two decades. Between ballooning debt to GDP ratios, overinvestment in the property market, and industrial overcapacity, the uneven structure of China’s economic growth provides plenty of reasons for concern. Yet so far, China’s unique blend of state-led and laissez-faire capitalism has proved remarkably strong, defying numerous predictions of imminent economic catastrophe. In her book, Professor Lee examines why China’s economy might be more resilient than commonly presumed, and provides a careful analysis of its strengths and weaknesses. She also add...

Why is Chinese economy slowing? - Inside Story

Countries around the globe are nervously watching what is happening to the Chinese economy - and fear the potential knock on effects.
New government statistics say China'sGDP grew last year by almost seven percent - many other countries would be delighted by that.
But its the lowest growth for 25 years - and another sign that the heady days of record-breaking economic expansion are long gone.
The true situation could be even worse - some analysts do not believe the official data.
As the world's second biggest economy again stalls, countries which export commodities such as oil and iron ore to China are suffering - with the possibility of worse to come.
So, what has gone wrong? And should the world be concerned?
Presenter: Sami Zeidan
Guests:
PaulineLoong - Managing director of As...

published: 19 Jan 2016

Arthur Kroeber: "China’s Economy: Powerhouse, Menace, or the Next Japan?"

Arthur Kroeber speaks about the future of China's economy at the Paulson Institute's Contemporary China Speakers Series on May 16, 2016.
In the last three decades China has surged from impoverished backwater to become the world’s second-biggest economy and largest trading nation. Yet as the recent tumult on global markets shows, China risks destabilizing the world as it makes the hard shift from an investment-driven to a consumer-oriented economy. The headwinds of a rapidly aging population, a battle against rampant corruption and an enormous national debt are also slowing the country’s growth. Will China mature into a global economic leader, trigger a crisis, or stagnate like Japan? Arthur Kroeber, one of the world’s leading commentators on the Chinese economy, tackles these tough questi...

published: 07 Jun 2016

Is the Chinese economy heading for collapse in the near future?

Globalization has brought China closer to other countries than ever before. A healthy Chinese economy means way more than China itself. How firm of a footing is China’s economy on? Is it heading to some kind of crisis that some people contained?
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Understanding the Chinese Economy: Where Is It Headed?

Is China heading for a crash? China’s economy inspires extreme and, often, diametrically opposed views. Bears: growth is severely unbalanced, waste unbearably high, and collapse nigh; massive stock market crashes, weakening manufacturing, and devaluation of the Chinese currency are all risk factors. Bulls: past performance is proof of the government’s managerial skill, innovation is blossoming and China will soon surpass America as the global economic powerhouse. Can we go beyond the conventional wisdom?
Arthur R. Kroeber is founding partner of Gavekal Dragonomics, a China-focused economic research consultancy he helped establish in Beijing in 2002 after 15 years as a freelance financial journalist in Asia, and editor of its flagship publication China Economic Quarterly. He is also head ...

published: 25 Jan 2017

China's Economy in Crisis | Inside the Chinese Financial System with Anne Stevenson-Yang

China Living On Edge Of Economic Collapse

The IMFInternational Monetary Fund along with many experts is talking about the possibility that China’s debt may go as high as 300% of the GDP by 2022. Financial experts are predicting gloom and doom for the Chinese communist country. China is using manipulation of their credit and debt to make wild predictions of growth. China is facing an increasing of large amount of countries copying their business model. Business contracts that were going to China are now finding their way to other parts of Asia with cheap labor markets and big improvement of inter-structures, see video for more..
Website: http://sixthsealnewstalk.com/
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James J. Tsidkenu

ChinaDocumentary: How China Dominated The World's Economy
China, officially the People's Republic of China (PRC), is a sovereign state in East Asia. With a population of over 1.381 billion, it is the world's most populous state.
China's socialist market economy is the world's second largest economy by nominal GDP, and the world's largest economy by purchasing power parity according to the IMF, although China's National Bureau of Statistics rejects this claim. Until 2015 China was the world's fastest-growing major economy, with growth rates averaging 10% over 30 years. Due to historical and political facts of China's developing economy, China's public sector accounts for a bigger share of the national economy than the burgeoning private sector.
China is a global hub for manufacturing, and is the largest manufacturing economy in the world as well as the largest exporter of goods in the world. China is also the world's fastest growing consumer market and second largest importer of goods in the world. China is a net importer of services products.
Watch More: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCgPmFlw7U0VgUFIkWBDpZSg
Sources:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economy_of_China
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/China

ChinaDocumentary: How China Dominated The World's Economy
China, officially the People's Republic of China (PRC), is a sovereign state in East Asia. With a population of over 1.381 billion, it is the world's most populous state.
China's socialist market economy is the world's second largest economy by nominal GDP, and the world's largest economy by purchasing power parity according to the IMF, although China's National Bureau of Statistics rejects this claim. Until 2015 China was the world's fastest-growing major economy, with growth rates averaging 10% over 30 years. Due to historical and political facts of China's developing economy, China's public sector accounts for a bigger share of the national economy than the burgeoning private sector.
China is a global hub for manufacturing, and is the largest manufacturing economy in the world as well as the largest exporter of goods in the world. China is also the world's fastest growing consumer market and second largest importer of goods in the world. China is a net importer of services products.
Watch More: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCgPmFlw7U0VgUFIkWBDpZSg
Sources:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economy_of_China
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/China

For more programming, please visit: http://www.ncuscr.org.
In a new book, Will China’sEconomyCollapse? New York UniversityAdjunct ProfessorAnn Lee addresses a key question that China watchers and economists have been asking for more than two decades. Between ballooning debt to GDP ratios, overinvestment in the property market, and industrial overcapacity, the uneven structure of China’s economic growth provides plenty of reasons for concern. Yet so far, China’s unique blend of state-led and laissez-faire capitalism has proved remarkably strong, defying numerous predictions of imminent economic catastrophe. In her book, Professor Lee examines why China’s economy might be more resilient than commonly presumed, and provides a careful analysis of its strengths and weaknesses. She also addresses the implications for other capitalist societies around the world and offers advice to policy makers about what changes must occur to ensure continued global stability and prosperity. Professor Lee discussed her book, China’s economic outlook, and the future of global capitalism on February 7, 2018.
Ann Lee is an internationally recognized authority on China’s economic relations and the CEO of Coterie, a new technology investment consortium. She is also a former visiting professor at Peking University and currently an adjunct professor at New York University where she teaches macroeconomics and financial derivatives. She consults with policymakers from Europe, Asia, Latin America, and the U.S. about U.S.-China relations, international finance and trade, and China’s political economy.
In addition to numerous television and radio appearances, Dr. Lee’s op-eds have appeared in major publications in the United States and Asia.
A former investment banker in high yield bonds and technology stocks, as well as a partner and credit derivatives trader in two multi-billion dollar hedge fund firms, she is also the author of the book What the U.S. Can Learn from China, an award winning international bestseller. She is an active member of the Authors Guild and the Pen AmericaSociety.
Dr. Lee attended U.C. Berkeley, Princeton University’s Woodrow Wilson School of International Affairs, and Harvard Business School.

For more programming, please visit: http://www.ncuscr.org.
In a new book, Will China’sEconomyCollapse? New York UniversityAdjunct ProfessorAnn Lee addresses a key question that China watchers and economists have been asking for more than two decades. Between ballooning debt to GDP ratios, overinvestment in the property market, and industrial overcapacity, the uneven structure of China’s economic growth provides plenty of reasons for concern. Yet so far, China’s unique blend of state-led and laissez-faire capitalism has proved remarkably strong, defying numerous predictions of imminent economic catastrophe. In her book, Professor Lee examines why China’s economy might be more resilient than commonly presumed, and provides a careful analysis of its strengths and weaknesses. She also addresses the implications for other capitalist societies around the world and offers advice to policy makers about what changes must occur to ensure continued global stability and prosperity. Professor Lee discussed her book, China’s economic outlook, and the future of global capitalism on February 7, 2018.
Ann Lee is an internationally recognized authority on China’s economic relations and the CEO of Coterie, a new technology investment consortium. She is also a former visiting professor at Peking University and currently an adjunct professor at New York University where she teaches macroeconomics and financial derivatives. She consults with policymakers from Europe, Asia, Latin America, and the U.S. about U.S.-China relations, international finance and trade, and China’s political economy.
In addition to numerous television and radio appearances, Dr. Lee’s op-eds have appeared in major publications in the United States and Asia.
A former investment banker in high yield bonds and technology stocks, as well as a partner and credit derivatives trader in two multi-billion dollar hedge fund firms, she is also the author of the book What the U.S. Can Learn from China, an award winning international bestseller. She is an active member of the Authors Guild and the Pen AmericaSociety.
Dr. Lee attended U.C. Berkeley, Princeton University’s Woodrow Wilson School of International Affairs, and Harvard Business School.

Help us reach 50,000 subscribers! SUBSCRIBE to our channel and suggest our channel to friends and family.
Special thanks to this month's sponsor: Walter and P...

Help us reach 50,000 subscribers! SUBSCRIBE to our channel and suggest our channel to friends and family.
Special thanks to this month's sponsor: Walter and PatriciaSouth of New York City. Walter is a frequent visitor to our recordings and a great friend of the show. Thank you from me and everyone here at Democracy at Work. We do need sponsors for the New Year, you can sponsor by visiting: democracyatwork.info/sponsor
"China’sEconomy Now, Its Growth and Global Impact"
with Richard D. Wolff
Co-sponsored by Democracy at Work,
LeftForum & Judson Memorial Church
Wednesday, November 8th 2017 at 7:30pm
Judson Memorial Church at Washington Square
These programs begin with 30 minutes of short updates on important economic events of the last month, then Wolff analyzes several major economic issues. This month, these issues will include:
1. Monopolies proliferating with dangerous economic consequences
2. 21 st century socialism and worker cooperatives
3. Catalonia: nationalism and capitalism
Our goal: To develop all participants’ understanding and ability to explain current economic events and trends to others. We open the floor to questions and comments when time permits.

Help us reach 50,000 subscribers! SUBSCRIBE to our channel and suggest our channel to friends and family.
Special thanks to this month's sponsor: Walter and PatriciaSouth of New York City. Walter is a frequent visitor to our recordings and a great friend of the show. Thank you from me and everyone here at Democracy at Work. We do need sponsors for the New Year, you can sponsor by visiting: democracyatwork.info/sponsor
"China’sEconomy Now, Its Growth and Global Impact"
with Richard D. Wolff
Co-sponsored by Democracy at Work,
LeftForum & Judson Memorial Church
Wednesday, November 8th 2017 at 7:30pm
Judson Memorial Church at Washington Square
These programs begin with 30 minutes of short updates on important economic events of the last month, then Wolff analyzes several major economic issues. This month, these issues will include:
1. Monopolies proliferating with dangerous economic consequences
2. 21 st century socialism and worker cooperatives
3. Catalonia: nationalism and capitalism
Our goal: To develop all participants’ understanding and ability to explain current economic events and trends to others. We open the floor to questions and comments when time permits.

Why is Chinese economy slowing? - Inside Story

Countries around the globe are nervously watching what is happening to the Chinese economy - and fear the potential knock on effects.
New government statistics...

Countries around the globe are nervously watching what is happening to the Chinese economy - and fear the potential knock on effects.
New government statistics say China'sGDP grew last year by almost seven percent - many other countries would be delighted by that.
But its the lowest growth for 25 years - and another sign that the heady days of record-breaking economic expansion are long gone.
The true situation could be even worse - some analysts do not believe the official data.
As the world's second biggest economy again stalls, countries which export commodities such as oil and iron ore to China are suffering - with the possibility of worse to come.
So, what has gone wrong? And should the world be concerned?
Presenter: Sami Zeidan
Guests:
PaulineLoong - Managing director of Asia-Analytica and analyst on China's political economy
Chris Watling - Chief market strategist at Longview Economics.
Michele Geraci - Professor of finance at Zhejian University and an economic adviser to governments, corporations and investors in China
- Subscribe to our channel http://bit.ly/AJSubscribe
- Follow us on Twitter https://twitter.com/AJEnglish
- Find us on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/aljazeera
- Check our website: http://www.aljazeera.com/

Countries around the globe are nervously watching what is happening to the Chinese economy - and fear the potential knock on effects.
New government statistics say China'sGDP grew last year by almost seven percent - many other countries would be delighted by that.
But its the lowest growth for 25 years - and another sign that the heady days of record-breaking economic expansion are long gone.
The true situation could be even worse - some analysts do not believe the official data.
As the world's second biggest economy again stalls, countries which export commodities such as oil and iron ore to China are suffering - with the possibility of worse to come.
So, what has gone wrong? And should the world be concerned?
Presenter: Sami Zeidan
Guests:
PaulineLoong - Managing director of Asia-Analytica and analyst on China's political economy
Chris Watling - Chief market strategist at Longview Economics.
Michele Geraci - Professor of finance at Zhejian University and an economic adviser to governments, corporations and investors in China
- Subscribe to our channel http://bit.ly/AJSubscribe
- Follow us on Twitter https://twitter.com/AJEnglish
- Find us on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/aljazeera
- Check our website: http://www.aljazeera.com/

published:19 Jan 2016

views:78035

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Arthur Kroeber: "China’s Economy: Powerhouse, Menace, or the Next Japan?"

Arthur Kroeber speaks about the future of China's economy at the Paulson Institute's Contemporary China Speakers Series on May 16, 2016.
In the last three decades China has surged from impoverished backwater to become the world’s second-biggest economy and largest trading nation. Yet as the recent tumult on global markets shows, China risks destabilizing the world as it makes the hard shift from an investment-driven to a consumer-oriented economy. The headwinds of a rapidly aging population, a battle against rampant corruption and an enormous national debt are also slowing the country’s growth. Will China mature into a global economic leader, trigger a crisis, or stagnate like Japan? Arthur Kroeber, one of the world’s leading commentators on the Chinese economy, tackles these tough questions.
Arthur R. Kroeber is head of research at Gavekal, a financial-services firm based in Hong Kong, founder of the China-focused Gavekal Dragonomics research service, and editor of China Economic Quarterly. He divides his time between Beijing and New York. Before founding Dragonomics in 2002, he spent fifteen years as a financial and economic journalist in China and South Asia. He is a senior non-resident fellow of the Brookings-Tsinghua Center, an adjunct professor at the Columbia UniversitySchool of International and Public Affairs, and a member of the National Committee on US-China Relations. His book "China’sEconomy: What Everyone Needs to Know" was published by Oxford University Press in April 2016.

Arthur Kroeber speaks about the future of China's economy at the Paulson Institute's Contemporary China Speakers Series on May 16, 2016.
In the last three decades China has surged from impoverished backwater to become the world’s second-biggest economy and largest trading nation. Yet as the recent tumult on global markets shows, China risks destabilizing the world as it makes the hard shift from an investment-driven to a consumer-oriented economy. The headwinds of a rapidly aging population, a battle against rampant corruption and an enormous national debt are also slowing the country’s growth. Will China mature into a global economic leader, trigger a crisis, or stagnate like Japan? Arthur Kroeber, one of the world’s leading commentators on the Chinese economy, tackles these tough questions.
Arthur R. Kroeber is head of research at Gavekal, a financial-services firm based in Hong Kong, founder of the China-focused Gavekal Dragonomics research service, and editor of China Economic Quarterly. He divides his time between Beijing and New York. Before founding Dragonomics in 2002, he spent fifteen years as a financial and economic journalist in China and South Asia. He is a senior non-resident fellow of the Brookings-Tsinghua Center, an adjunct professor at the Columbia UniversitySchool of International and Public Affairs, and a member of the National Committee on US-China Relations. His book "China’sEconomy: What Everyone Needs to Know" was published by Oxford University Press in April 2016.

Globalization has brought China closer to other countries than ever before. A healthy Chinese economy means way more than China itself. How firm of a footing is China’s economy on? Is it heading to some kind of crisis that some people contained?
Subscribe to us on YouTube: https://goo.gl/lP12gA
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Globalization has brought China closer to other countries than ever before. A healthy Chinese economy means way more than China itself. How firm of a footing is China’s economy on? Is it heading to some kind of crisis that some people contained?
Subscribe to us on YouTube: https://goo.gl/lP12gA
Download our APP on Apple Store (iOS): https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/cctvnews-app/id922456579?l=zh&ls=1&mt=8
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Wei Sun Christianson, Co-CEO, Asia Pacific, and ChinaCEO, Morgan StanleyDavid Daokui Li, Mansfield FreemanChairProfessor of Economics; Director, Center for China in the World Economy, Tsinghua UniversityMichael Pettis, Professor of Finance, Guanghua School of Management, Peking UniversityModerator: ClayChandler, Time Inc.
In nearly four decades, China has shifted from a centrally planned to a market-based economy that is the second-largest in the world. Over the next five years, this nation alone will import US $8 trillion worth of goods, attract $600 billion of foreign investment, make $750 billion in outbound investment, and send Chinese tourists on 700 million overseas visits. With long-term growth and sustainability in mind, China is now making a critical shift from an investment-driven model to an economic structure boosted by consumer spending. From creating trade initiatives and economic zones to lifting millions from poverty and driving innovation, China’s actions have the potential to shape the course of global business for years to come. Leading global and Chinese experts share important outcomes from the recent convening of the 19th National Congress and what they mean for business leaders looking to grow and capitalize on China’s new demographics.
Subscribe to Fortune -
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FORTUNE is a global leader in business journalism with a worldwide circulation of more than 1 million and a readership of nearly 5 million, with major franchises including the FORTUNE 500 and the FORTUNE 100Best Companies to Work For. FORTUNE Live Media extends the brand's mission into live settings, hosting a wide range of annual conferences, including the FORTUNE GlobalForum.
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Fortune Magazine is published by Time Inc.

Wei Sun Christianson, Co-CEO, Asia Pacific, and ChinaCEO, Morgan StanleyDavid Daokui Li, Mansfield FreemanChairProfessor of Economics; Director, Center for China in the World Economy, Tsinghua UniversityMichael Pettis, Professor of Finance, Guanghua School of Management, Peking UniversityModerator: ClayChandler, Time Inc.
In nearly four decades, China has shifted from a centrally planned to a market-based economy that is the second-largest in the world. Over the next five years, this nation alone will import US $8 trillion worth of goods, attract $600 billion of foreign investment, make $750 billion in outbound investment, and send Chinese tourists on 700 million overseas visits. With long-term growth and sustainability in mind, China is now making a critical shift from an investment-driven model to an economic structure boosted by consumer spending. From creating trade initiatives and economic zones to lifting millions from poverty and driving innovation, China’s actions have the potential to shape the course of global business for years to come. Leading global and Chinese experts share important outcomes from the recent convening of the 19th National Congress and what they mean for business leaders looking to grow and capitalize on China’s new demographics.
Subscribe to Fortune -
http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=FortuneMagazineVideo
FORTUNE is a global leader in business journalism with a worldwide circulation of more than 1 million and a readership of nearly 5 million, with major franchises including the FORTUNE 500 and the FORTUNE 100Best Companies to Work For. FORTUNE Live Media extends the brand's mission into live settings, hosting a wide range of annual conferences, including the FORTUNE GlobalForum.
Website: http://fortune.com/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/FortuneMagazine
Twitter: https://twitter.com/FortuneMagazine
Fortune Magazine is published by Time Inc.

Is China heading for a crash? China’s economy inspires extreme and, often, diametrically opposed views. Bears: growth is severely unbalanced, waste unbearably high, and collapse nigh; massive stock market crashes, weakening manufacturing, and devaluation of the Chinese currency are all risk factors. Bulls: past performance is proof of the government’s managerial skill, innovation is blossoming and China will soon surpass America as the global economic powerhouse. Can we go beyond the conventional wisdom?
Arthur R. Kroeber is founding partner of Gavekal Dragonomics, a China-focused economic research consultancy he helped establish in Beijing in 2002 after 15 years as a freelance financial journalist in Asia, and editor of its flagship publication China Economic Quarterly. He is also head of research at the parent company Gavekal, a financial services firm based in Hong Kong, where he advises financial, corporate and government clients on economic and political developments in China. Arthur has just published a new book, “China’sEconomy: What Everyone Needs to Know”, earlier in 2016 (https://china-economy-book.com/). Arthur is a senior non-resident fellow of the Brookings-Tsinghua Center for Public Policy, adjunct professor at Columbia University’s School of International and Public Affairs, and a member of the National Committee on US-China Relations. He lives in Beijing and New York.
Joe Studwell is the founding editor of the “China Economic Quarterly”. Since 1997 the China Economic Quarterly has been the leading source of analysis and understanding of the Chinese economy for business leaders, diplomats, academics and other China-watchers. Joe has contributed to the Economist, Financial Times, Asian Wall Street Journal, Far Eastern Economic Review, and many other publications. Previous books include “How Asia Asian Godfathers” (2007, about developmental failure in south-east Asia) which sold over 16,000 copies for Profile and “The China Dream” (2002, about the 1990s foreign investment gold rush in China), and “How Asia Works” (2013, an explication of economic development across the east Asian region). Visit his blog (https://joestudwell.wordpress.com/about/) for interesting updates.
This lecture was recorded on 21st November 2016 at MillLane Lecture Site, University of Cambridge.
Want to find out more?
Like our Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/CambridgeSocietyForEconomicPluralism
Browse our website: http://www.cambridgepluralism.org/
And of course you can also subscribe to our YouTube channel!

Is China heading for a crash? China’s economy inspires extreme and, often, diametrically opposed views. Bears: growth is severely unbalanced, waste unbearably high, and collapse nigh; massive stock market crashes, weakening manufacturing, and devaluation of the Chinese currency are all risk factors. Bulls: past performance is proof of the government’s managerial skill, innovation is blossoming and China will soon surpass America as the global economic powerhouse. Can we go beyond the conventional wisdom?
Arthur R. Kroeber is founding partner of Gavekal Dragonomics, a China-focused economic research consultancy he helped establish in Beijing in 2002 after 15 years as a freelance financial journalist in Asia, and editor of its flagship publication China Economic Quarterly. He is also head of research at the parent company Gavekal, a financial services firm based in Hong Kong, where he advises financial, corporate and government clients on economic and political developments in China. Arthur has just published a new book, “China’sEconomy: What Everyone Needs to Know”, earlier in 2016 (https://china-economy-book.com/). Arthur is a senior non-resident fellow of the Brookings-Tsinghua Center for Public Policy, adjunct professor at Columbia University’s School of International and Public Affairs, and a member of the National Committee on US-China Relations. He lives in Beijing and New York.
Joe Studwell is the founding editor of the “China Economic Quarterly”. Since 1997 the China Economic Quarterly has been the leading source of analysis and understanding of the Chinese economy for business leaders, diplomats, academics and other China-watchers. Joe has contributed to the Economist, Financial Times, Asian Wall Street Journal, Far Eastern Economic Review, and many other publications. Previous books include “How Asia Asian Godfathers” (2007, about developmental failure in south-east Asia) which sold over 16,000 copies for Profile and “The China Dream” (2002, about the 1990s foreign investment gold rush in China), and “How Asia Works” (2013, an explication of economic development across the east Asian region). Visit his blog (https://joestudwell.wordpress.com/about/) for interesting updates.
This lecture was recorded on 21st November 2016 at MillLane Lecture Site, University of Cambridge.
Want to find out more?
Like our Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/CambridgeSocietyForEconomicPluralism
Browse our website: http://www.cambridgepluralism.org/
And of course you can also subscribe to our YouTube channel!

published:25 Jan 2017

views:1856

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China's Economy in Crisis | Inside the Chinese Financial System with Anne Stevenson-Yang

Subscribe to Hidden Forces Here: http://www.hiddenforcespod.com/
In Episode 16 of Hidden Forces, host Demetri Kofinas speaks with Anne Stevenson-Yang. Anne is the co-founder of J CapitalResearch, which conducts ground-up, primary research for institutional money managers on stocks, the Chinese economy, and the Chinese financial system. Over 25 years in China, Mrs. Stevenson-Yang has also worked as an industry analyst and trade advocate, heading the US Information TechnologyOffice and the China operations of the US-ChinaBusiness Council. Anne Stevenson-Yang is the author of the recent book China Alone: China’sEmergence and Potential Return to Isolation, in which she sets out her views on the Chinese economy and political system, arguing that China historically repeats a cycle of expansion and retreat.
In this episode, we take a trip to the other side of the world. We travel to the land of China. Our conversation concerns itself with the contemporary changes in Chinese society that came after the death of Chairman Mao. What was life like in China before Nixon and Kissinger made their famous visit in 1971? Why did modernization and reform in China begin after 1978? Who was responsible for the opening in China? What was the role of Deng Xiaoping, and why is he remembered as “the architect” of a new brand of thinking that combined socialist ideology with pragmatic aspects of market economics – a system the Chinese call “Socialism with Chinese Characteristics.”
What changes did the Chinese experience between 1979 and 1989, during the implementation of the economic reforms of Deng Xiaoping? How did these reforms culminate into the protests in Tiananmen Square in 1989? What was the Chinese government’s reaction to the uprisings? The Chinese response differed significantly from the Soviet reaction to the fall of the Berlin Wall in the same year. The Chinese government decided to follow a different path after the massacres in Tiananmen Square, by turbocharging economic development. Explicit targets were set for GDP growth. There was selective liberalization of the Chinese economy, particularly in Chinese real estate. China placed a huge emphasis on building its manufacturing industries and on acquiring hard currency through exports. The Chinese financial system remained highly centralized and China’s currency, the renminbi, carefully controlled. All this was used towards re-investment with an almost single-minded commitment to hitting the government’s GDP targets.
Some have called the rise of China in the late 20th century a miracle. It is more appropriate to call it “the Chinese miracle.” The size of the Chinese economy has increased more than 25-fold in the last 25 years. Thirty years ago, the Chinese economy measured in at less than 5% of US GDP in exchange terms (perhaps as low as 2%). By 1992, the Chinese economy was only 6% of US GDP. By 2000 China weighed in at roughly 12-15% of US GDP. Today, China boasts a Gross Domestic Product that is roughly 60% that of United States. Loan Growth in the Chinese financial system has averaged 16% in the last 20 years. Loan growth in China reached an all-time high of 35% of GDP in June of 2009, amidst the greatest economic contraction since the Great Depression. Total debt in China recently surpassed 300% of GDP. This makes the finances of Western nations like the United States, France, and the United Kingdom seem frugal by comparison. In the first 7 years since the financial crisis, bank liabilities in the Chinese financial system grew by nearly $15 trillion dollars. This is the near equivalent of the consolidated size of all US commercial banks. China has used more cement in 3 years of massive overbuilding than the U.S. employed in all of the 20th Century. Hundreds of thousands of meters of unsold residential real estate sit empty around the country. There is a massive amount of industrial overcapacity in China. Chinese ghost cities have become almost as cliche as the fake Paris’, Venice, and Dubai’s created within mainland China. The Chinese economy is in terrible need of a recession. But the Chinese government cannot afford the recession that it desperately needs. Nevertheless, it cannot avoid the crisis that has been building in the Chinese financial system. How will the citizens of China, its trading partners, emerging markets and developed economies react when the reckoning finally arrives. How much longer can the Chinese government continue to postpone the inevitable?
Follow us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/hiddenforcespod/
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Subscribe to Hidden Forces Here: http://www.hiddenforcespod.com/
In Episode 16 of Hidden Forces, host Demetri Kofinas speaks with Anne Stevenson-Yang. Anne is the co-founder of J CapitalResearch, which conducts ground-up, primary research for institutional money managers on stocks, the Chinese economy, and the Chinese financial system. Over 25 years in China, Mrs. Stevenson-Yang has also worked as an industry analyst and trade advocate, heading the US Information TechnologyOffice and the China operations of the US-ChinaBusiness Council. Anne Stevenson-Yang is the author of the recent book China Alone: China’sEmergence and Potential Return to Isolation, in which she sets out her views on the Chinese economy and political system, arguing that China historically repeats a cycle of expansion and retreat.
In this episode, we take a trip to the other side of the world. We travel to the land of China. Our conversation concerns itself with the contemporary changes in Chinese society that came after the death of Chairman Mao. What was life like in China before Nixon and Kissinger made their famous visit in 1971? Why did modernization and reform in China begin after 1978? Who was responsible for the opening in China? What was the role of Deng Xiaoping, and why is he remembered as “the architect” of a new brand of thinking that combined socialist ideology with pragmatic aspects of market economics – a system the Chinese call “Socialism with Chinese Characteristics.”
What changes did the Chinese experience between 1979 and 1989, during the implementation of the economic reforms of Deng Xiaoping? How did these reforms culminate into the protests in Tiananmen Square in 1989? What was the Chinese government’s reaction to the uprisings? The Chinese response differed significantly from the Soviet reaction to the fall of the Berlin Wall in the same year. The Chinese government decided to follow a different path after the massacres in Tiananmen Square, by turbocharging economic development. Explicit targets were set for GDP growth. There was selective liberalization of the Chinese economy, particularly in Chinese real estate. China placed a huge emphasis on building its manufacturing industries and on acquiring hard currency through exports. The Chinese financial system remained highly centralized and China’s currency, the renminbi, carefully controlled. All this was used towards re-investment with an almost single-minded commitment to hitting the government’s GDP targets.
Some have called the rise of China in the late 20th century a miracle. It is more appropriate to call it “the Chinese miracle.” The size of the Chinese economy has increased more than 25-fold in the last 25 years. Thirty years ago, the Chinese economy measured in at less than 5% of US GDP in exchange terms (perhaps as low as 2%). By 1992, the Chinese economy was only 6% of US GDP. By 2000 China weighed in at roughly 12-15% of US GDP. Today, China boasts a Gross Domestic Product that is roughly 60% that of United States. Loan Growth in the Chinese financial system has averaged 16% in the last 20 years. Loan growth in China reached an all-time high of 35% of GDP in June of 2009, amidst the greatest economic contraction since the Great Depression. Total debt in China recently surpassed 300% of GDP. This makes the finances of Western nations like the United States, France, and the United Kingdom seem frugal by comparison. In the first 7 years since the financial crisis, bank liabilities in the Chinese financial system grew by nearly $15 trillion dollars. This is the near equivalent of the consolidated size of all US commercial banks. China has used more cement in 3 years of massive overbuilding than the U.S. employed in all of the 20th Century. Hundreds of thousands of meters of unsold residential real estate sit empty around the country. There is a massive amount of industrial overcapacity in China. Chinese ghost cities have become almost as cliche as the fake Paris’, Venice, and Dubai’s created within mainland China. The Chinese economy is in terrible need of a recession. But the Chinese government cannot afford the recession that it desperately needs. Nevertheless, it cannot avoid the crisis that has been building in the Chinese financial system. How will the citizens of China, its trading partners, emerging markets and developed economies react when the reckoning finally arrives. How much longer can the Chinese government continue to postpone the inevitable?
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The IMFInternational Monetary Fund along with many experts is talking about the possibility that China’s debt may go as high as 300% of the GDP by 2022. Financial experts are predicting gloom and doom for the Chinese communist country. China is using manipulation of their credit and debt to make wild predictions of growth. China is facing an increasing of large amount of countries copying their business model. Business contracts that were going to China are now finding their way to other parts of Asia with cheap labor markets and big improvement of inter-structures, see video for more..
Website: http://sixthsealnewstalk.com/
Donation at: https://www.patreon.com/sixthsealnewsandtalk
Thank you for your support
James J. Tsidkenu

The IMFInternational Monetary Fund along with many experts is talking about the possibility that China’s debt may go as high as 300% of the GDP by 2022. Financial experts are predicting gloom and doom for the Chinese communist country. China is using manipulation of their credit and debt to make wild predictions of growth. China is facing an increasing of large amount of countries copying their business model. Business contracts that were going to China are now finding their way to other parts of Asia with cheap labor markets and big improvement of inter-structures, see video for more..
Website: http://sixthsealnewstalk.com/
Donation at: https://www.patreon.com/sixthsealnewsandtalk
Thank you for your support
James J. Tsidkenu

On this day 21 years ago, Deng Xiaoping, the architect of modern China and the visionary of China’s reform and opening up, passed away. As this year is celebrat...

On this day 21 years ago, Deng Xiaoping, the architect of modern China and the visionary of China’s reform and opening up, passed away. As this year is celebrating the 40th anniversary of the reform vision, what changes have taken place across the second largest economy? And what are the new tasks ahead for China? Charles Liu, founder of Hao Capital, and Yi Min, chief advisor of MTR China Business, join the discussion.
AlanBabington Smith, president of the Royal Asiatic SocietyBeijing, recommended a science fiction book series Foundation written by American authorIsaac Asimov. He shared his ideas on the power of human imagination and its motivation to the future possibilities at The Point’s special program, called Speaking Volumes during China’s Spring Festival.
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On this day 21 years ago, Deng Xiaoping, the architect of modern China and the visionary of China’s reform and opening up, passed away. As this year is celebrating the 40th anniversary of the reform vision, what changes have taken place across the second largest economy? And what are the new tasks ahead for China? Charles Liu, founder of Hao Capital, and Yi Min, chief advisor of MTR China Business, join the discussion.
AlanBabington Smith, president of the Royal Asiatic SocietyBeijing, recommended a science fiction book series Foundation written by American authorIsaac Asimov. He shared his ideas on the power of human imagination and its motivation to the future possibilities at The Point’s special program, called Speaking Volumes during China’s Spring Festival.
Subscribe to us on YouTube: https://goo.gl/lP12gA
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Why is the CHINESE Economy ADDICTED to DEBT? - VisualPolitik EN

We can´t hide it, here at VisualPolitik we love Asia, and that’s partly because, we believe that the world’s centre is already on this continent. But in the last few decades, one country has stood out of the crowd, and that is China.
China has faced two major threats in the last years: less growth and much, much, more debt. In fact, this has even lead to an important question: Can China go bankrupt? Well, that's what we'll be talking in today's video!
And don't forget to visit our friend’s podcast, ReconsiderMedia:
http://www.reconsidermedia.com/
Some related articles:
BigRatingsFirmsStronger Than Ever - https://www.wsj.com/articles/what-crisis-big-ratings-firms-stronger-than-ever-1457655084
ChineseGhost towns - http://www.businessinsider.com/these-chinese-cities-are-ghost-towns-2017-4
China overcapacity 'wreaking far-reaching damage' - http://www.dw.com/en/china-overcapacity-wreaking-far-reaching-damage/a-19060913
Why China’sGrowingDebtLoad Worries the World? -
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/05/24/business/china-downgrade-explained.html

12:25

Tyler Cowen: The Rise and Fall of the Chinese Economy

A very poor country turned modern economy, China is now facing economic hardship. How did ...

Tyler Cowen: The Rise and Fall of the Chinese Economy

A very poor country turned modern economy, China is now facing economic hardship. How did this happen? What led to its astonishing economic growth and what’s fueling its current woes? JoinTyler Cowen as he dives into the rise and fall of China’s economy.
Many of China’s current problems are rooted deep in the country's economic history. We start our discussion in 1979 when Chinese reformers introduced the concept of private property and more capitalistic incentives, privatized agriculture, and allowed for more manufacturing and exporting — all of which put China’s economy on an upward trajectory.
Along with these reforms came transformational growth. For much of the past 35 years, China’s GDP per capita has grown at about 10% per year. In other words, living standards in China doubled about every seven years.
What did the economy look like during these periods of rapid growth? High levels of savings and high levels of investment, especially in infrastructure projects. China’s economy required more complex investments too — in health care and and start-ups, for example.
A turning point for the Chinese economy came in 2009. With the recession affecting many other countries, China’s government took steps to avoid the recession and keep the economy afloat, but at a cost. Debt skyrocketed during the period, which is proving less sustainable as China’s rate of growth declines.
There’s some discrepancy over China’s current growth rate — the Chinese government claims 7% per year, but external observers predict this rate is much lower, and that China is now entering a recession. To gain a better understanding, we take a look at five specific areas in this video: the real estate bubble, the stock market bubble, the excess level of municipal debt, the excess capacity among Chinese businesses, and the risk of capital flight. When you consider all of these areas together, it paints a very complex picture and one which is proving difficult for China to manage.
Even still, there are reasons to remain optimistic. China has invested tremendously in human capital, which is one of the most valuable assets to any modern economy. These investments in human capital will certainly survive the current recession and help facilitate a bright economic future.
Ask a question about the video: http://bit.ly/1pprkc8
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What should Tyler Cowen cover in his next video? Vote or submit your idea here: http://bit.ly/1ppr1Os
Everyday Economics course page: http://bit.ly/21KO9Vq
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15:37

China economy is FAILING- bankruptcy ahead?

China can not develop its own technologies? It can not innovate fast enough?
The debt is t...

China economy is FAILING- bankruptcy ahead?

China can not develop its own technologies? It can not innovate fast enough?
The debt is too high and government can not cope with it.
Foreign countries block Chinese investment and strategy to get ownership over ressources and buy foreign technologies.
PATREON: https://www.patreon.com/chinanonstop

1:47

Here's Why China's Economy Will Be So Hard to Fix

China’s leaders have a mammoth task steering the world’s second largest economy out of its...

Here's Why China's Economy Will Be So Hard to Fix

China’s leaders have a mammoth task steering the world’s second largest economy out of its current slowdown. This QuickTake examines the challenges they face.
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8:15

Is China's economy in good shape? Not really... | Xander Snyder Interview

China Documentary: How China Dominated The World's Economy

ChinaDocumentary: How China Dominated The World's Economy
China, officially the People's Republic of China (PRC), is a sovereign state in East Asia. With a population of over 1.381 billion, it is the world's most populous state.
China's socialist market economy is the world's second largest economy by nominal GDP, and the world's largest economy by purchasing power parity according to the IMF, although China's National Bureau of Statistics rejects this claim. Until 2015 China was the world's fastest-growing major economy, with growth rates averaging 10% over 30 years. Due to historical and political facts of China's developing economy, China's public sector accounts for a bigger share of the national economy than the burgeoning private sector.
China is a global hub for manufacturing, and is the largest manufacturing economy in the world as well as the largest exporter of goods in the world. China is also the world's fastest growing consumer market and second largest importer of goods in the world. China is a net importer of services products.
Watch More: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCgPmFlw7U0VgUFIkWBDpZSg
Sources:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economy_of_China
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/China

1:25

How China became the world's second largest economy

More than 500 million people have been lifted out of poverty since China's economic reform...

The Rise of China Mini-Documentary | Episode 1 | China's Economic Miracle
Two centuries ago, Napoleon warned, “Let China sleep: when she wakes, she will shake the world.”
The rise of China will undoubtedly be one of the great dramas of the twenty-first century. China's extraordinary economic growth and active diplomacy are already transforming East Asia, and future decades will see even greater increases in Chinese power and influence.
In this episode we will look only at the sheer size of China today. We will then look at it’s threats, challenges and confrontations with America in future episodes.
In 1980, China’s gross domestic product (GDP) was less than 300 billion dollars; by 2015, it was 11 trillion dollars—making it the world’s second-largest economy by market exchange rates. China’s trade with the outside world in 1980 amounted to less than 40 billion dollars; by 2015, it had increased one hundredfold, to a whopping 4 trillion dollars.
Even at its lower growth rate in 2015, China’s economy created a Greece every sixteen weeks and an Israel every twenty-five weeks.
Measured by purchasing power parity, which measures how many aircraft, missiles, ships, sailors, pilots, drones, bases, and other military- related items a state can buy and the prices it has to pay in its own national currency, China has not only surpassed the US, but also now accounts for roughly 18 percent of world GDP, compared to just 2 percent in 1980.
By 2005, the country was building the square-foot equivalent of today’s Rome every two weeks.
Between 2011 and 2013, China both produced and used more cement than US did in the entire twentieth century.
On its current path, China will surpass the US to become the world leader in research-and-development spending by 2019.
Since June 2013, the world’s fastest supercomputer has been located not in Silicon Valley but in China. Indeed, in the rankings of the world’s 500 fastest supercomputers—a list from which China was absent in 2001—today it has 167, two more than the United States. Moreover, China’s top supercomputer is five times faster than the closest American competitor. And while China’s supercomputers previously relied heavily on American processors, its top computer in 2016 was built entirely with domestic processors.
As China’s economy has gotten bigger, its guns and tanks—and their twenty-first-century equivalents—have gotten better, and allowed for a new level of competition with other great powers, especially the United States. Just as technology start-ups like Facebook and Uber have used the concept of disruptive innovation to upend previously dominant firms, the Chinese military is developing new technologies that can counter ships, planes, and satellites that the US has developed over decades—and for a fraction of the cost.
China has increased its defense spending nearly fivefold over the last decade. China currently spends more on defense than Japan, South Korea, the Philippines, and Vietnam combined, and China’s military spending is second only to the United States.
China is now building a Blue Water navy. A Blue Water navy patrols the oceans. It will take another thirty years (assuming economic progression) for China to build naval capacity to seriously challenge the most powerful seaborne force the world has ever seen – the US navy. But in the medium to short term, as it builds, and trains, and learns, the Chinese navy will bump up against its rivals in the seas; and how those bumps are managed will define great power politics in this century.
China intends to become a two-ocean power (Pacific and Indian). To achieve this China is investing in deep-water ports in Burma, Bangladesh, Pakistan and Sri Lanka – an investment which buys it good relations, the potential for its future navy to have friendly bases to visit or reside in, and trade links back home.
In 2014, China inaugurated a major international economic development program by financing infrastructure projects in the historical silk route countries. It is engaged in financing economic infrastructure projects in the silk route countries with positive ROI for China and the recipient countries.
The Chinese are also building ports in Kenya, railway lines in Angola, and a hydroelectric dam in Ethiopia. They are scouring the length and breadth of the whole of Africa for minerals and precious metals.
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1:04:09

Will China's Economy Collapse? with Ann Lee

For more programming, please visit: http://www.ncuscr.org.
In a new book, Will China’s Ec...

Will China's Economy Collapse? with Ann Lee

For more programming, please visit: http://www.ncuscr.org.
In a new book, Will China’sEconomyCollapse? New York UniversityAdjunct ProfessorAnn Lee addresses a key question that China watchers and economists have been asking for more than two decades. Between ballooning debt to GDP ratios, overinvestment in the property market, and industrial overcapacity, the uneven structure of China’s economic growth provides plenty of reasons for concern. Yet so far, China’s unique blend of state-led and laissez-faire capitalism has proved remarkably strong, defying numerous predictions of imminent economic catastrophe. In her book, Professor Lee examines why China’s economy might be more resilient than commonly presumed, and provides a careful analysis of its strengths and weaknesses. She also addresses the implications for other capitalist societies around the world and offers advice to policy makers about what changes must occur to ensure continued global stability and prosperity. Professor Lee discussed her book, China’s economic outlook, and the future of global capitalism on February 7, 2018.
Ann Lee is an internationally recognized authority on China’s economic relations and the CEO of Coterie, a new technology investment consortium. She is also a former visiting professor at Peking University and currently an adjunct professor at New York University where she teaches macroeconomics and financial derivatives. She consults with policymakers from Europe, Asia, Latin America, and the U.S. about U.S.-China relations, international finance and trade, and China’s political economy.
In addition to numerous television and radio appearances, Dr. Lee’s op-eds have appeared in major publications in the United States and Asia.
A former investment banker in high yield bonds and technology stocks, as well as a partner and credit derivatives trader in two multi-billion dollar hedge fund firms, she is also the author of the book What the U.S. Can Learn from China, an award winning international bestseller. She is an active member of the Authors Guild and the Pen AmericaSociety.
Dr. Lee attended U.C. Berkeley, Princeton University’s Woodrow Wilson School of International Affairs, and Harvard Business School.

9:26

China’s Next Financial Crisis: Shadow Banking

China's economy depends on the highly suspect practice of shadow banking. Is the Chinese e...

Help us reach 50,000 subscribers! SUBSCRIBE to our channel and suggest our channel to friends and family.
Special thanks to this month's sponsor: Walter and PatriciaSouth of New York City. Walter is a frequent visitor to our recordings and a great friend of the show. Thank you from me and everyone here at Democracy at Work. We do need sponsors for the New Year, you can sponsor by visiting: democracyatwork.info/sponsor
"China’sEconomy Now, Its Growth and Global Impact"
with Richard D. Wolff
Co-sponsored by Democracy at Work,
LeftForum & Judson Memorial Church
Wednesday, November 8th 2017 at 7:30pm
Judson Memorial Church at Washington Square
These programs begin with 30 minutes of short updates on important economic events of the last month, then Wolff analyzes several major economic issues. This month, these issues will include:
1. Monopolies proliferating with dangerous economic consequences
2. 21 st century socialism and worker cooperatives
3. Catalonia: nationalism and capitalism
Our goal: To develop all participants’ understanding and ability to explain current economic events and trends to others. We open the floor to questions and comments when time permits.

5:51

Chinese economy set to overtake US in 2032

London Center for Policy Research President Herb London discusses reports that the Chinese...

Why is Chinese economy slowing? - Inside Story

Countries around the globe are nervously watching what is happening to the Chinese economy - and fear the potential knock on effects.
New government statistics say China'sGDP grew last year by almost seven percent - many other countries would be delighted by that.
But its the lowest growth for 25 years - and another sign that the heady days of record-breaking economic expansion are long gone.
The true situation could be even worse - some analysts do not believe the official data.
As the world's second biggest economy again stalls, countries which export commodities such as oil and iron ore to China are suffering - with the possibility of worse to come.
So, what has gone wrong? And should the world be concerned?
Presenter: Sami Zeidan
Guests:
PaulineLoong - Managing director of Asia-Analytica and analyst on China's political economy
Chris Watling - Chief market strategist at Longview Economics.
Michele Geraci - Professor of finance at Zhejian University and an economic adviser to governments, corporations and investors in China
- Subscribe to our channel http://bit.ly/AJSubscribe
- Follow us on Twitter https://twitter.com/AJEnglish
- Find us on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/aljazeera
- Check our website: http://www.aljazeera.com/

China Documentary: How China Dominated The World's Economy

ChinaDocumentary: How China Dominated The World's Economy
China, officially the People's Republic of China (PRC), is a sovereign state in East Asia. With a population of over 1.381 billion, it is the world's most populous state.
China's socialist market economy is the world's second largest economy by nominal GDP, and the world's largest economy by purchasing power parity according to the IMF, although China's National Bureau of Statistics rejects this claim. Until 2015 China was the world's fastest-growing major economy, with growth rates averaging 10% over 30 years. Due to historical and political facts of China's developing economy, China's public sector accounts for a bigger share of the national economy than the burgeoning private sector.
China is a global hub for manufacturing, and is the largest manufacturing economy in the world as well as the largest exporter of goods in the world. China is also the world's fastest growing consumer market and second largest importer of goods in the world. China is a net importer of services products.
Watch More: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCgPmFlw7U0VgUFIkWBDpZSg
Sources:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economy_of_China
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/China

1:04:09

Will China's Economy Collapse? with Ann Lee

For more programming, please visit: http://www.ncuscr.org.
In a new book, Will China’s Ec...

Will China's Economy Collapse? with Ann Lee

For more programming, please visit: http://www.ncuscr.org.
In a new book, Will China’sEconomyCollapse? New York UniversityAdjunct ProfessorAnn Lee addresses a key question that China watchers and economists have been asking for more than two decades. Between ballooning debt to GDP ratios, overinvestment in the property market, and industrial overcapacity, the uneven structure of China’s economic growth provides plenty of reasons for concern. Yet so far, China’s unique blend of state-led and laissez-faire capitalism has proved remarkably strong, defying numerous predictions of imminent economic catastrophe. In her book, Professor Lee examines why China’s economy might be more resilient than commonly presumed, and provides a careful analysis of its strengths and weaknesses. She also addresses the implications for other capitalist societies around the world and offers advice to policy makers about what changes must occur to ensure continued global stability and prosperity. Professor Lee discussed her book, China’s economic outlook, and the future of global capitalism on February 7, 2018.
Ann Lee is an internationally recognized authority on China’s economic relations and the CEO of Coterie, a new technology investment consortium. She is also a former visiting professor at Peking University and currently an adjunct professor at New York University where she teaches macroeconomics and financial derivatives. She consults with policymakers from Europe, Asia, Latin America, and the U.S. about U.S.-China relations, international finance and trade, and China’s political economy.
In addition to numerous television and radio appearances, Dr. Lee’s op-eds have appeared in major publications in the United States and Asia.
A former investment banker in high yield bonds and technology stocks, as well as a partner and credit derivatives trader in two multi-billion dollar hedge fund firms, she is also the author of the book What the U.S. Can Learn from China, an award winning international bestseller. She is an active member of the Authors Guild and the Pen AmericaSociety.
Dr. Lee attended U.C. Berkeley, Princeton University’s Woodrow Wilson School of International Affairs, and Harvard Business School.

Help us reach 50,000 subscribers! SUBSCRIBE to our channel and suggest our channel to friends and family.
Special thanks to this month's sponsor: Walter and PatriciaSouth of New York City. Walter is a frequent visitor to our recordings and a great friend of the show. Thank you from me and everyone here at Democracy at Work. We do need sponsors for the New Year, you can sponsor by visiting: democracyatwork.info/sponsor
"China’sEconomy Now, Its Growth and Global Impact"
with Richard D. Wolff
Co-sponsored by Democracy at Work,
LeftForum & Judson Memorial Church
Wednesday, November 8th 2017 at 7:30pm
Judson Memorial Church at Washington Square
These programs begin with 30 minutes of short updates on important economic events of the last month, then Wolff analyzes several major economic issues. This month, these issues will include:
1. Monopolies proliferating with dangerous economic consequences
2. 21 st century socialism and worker cooperatives
3. Catalonia: nationalism and capitalism
Our goal: To develop all participants’ understanding and ability to explain current economic events and trends to others. We open the floor to questions and comments when time permits.

25:01

Why is Chinese economy slowing? - Inside Story

Countries around the globe are nervously watching what is happening to the Chinese economy...

Why is Chinese economy slowing? - Inside Story

Countries around the globe are nervously watching what is happening to the Chinese economy - and fear the potential knock on effects.
New government statistics say China'sGDP grew last year by almost seven percent - many other countries would be delighted by that.
But its the lowest growth for 25 years - and another sign that the heady days of record-breaking economic expansion are long gone.
The true situation could be even worse - some analysts do not believe the official data.
As the world's second biggest economy again stalls, countries which export commodities such as oil and iron ore to China are suffering - with the possibility of worse to come.
So, what has gone wrong? And should the world be concerned?
Presenter: Sami Zeidan
Guests:
PaulineLoong - Managing director of Asia-Analytica and analyst on China's political economy
Chris Watling - Chief market strategist at Longview Economics.
Michele Geraci - Professor of finance at Zhejian University and an economic adviser to governments, corporations and investors in China
- Subscribe to our channel http://bit.ly/AJSubscribe
- Follow us on Twitter https://twitter.com/AJEnglish
- Find us on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/aljazeera
- Check our website: http://www.aljazeera.com/

59:06

Arthur Kroeber: "China’s Economy: Powerhouse, Menace, or the Next Japan?"

Arthur Kroeber speaks about the future of China's economy at the Paulson Institute's Conte...

Arthur Kroeber: "China’s Economy: Powerhouse, Menace, or the Next Japan?"

Arthur Kroeber speaks about the future of China's economy at the Paulson Institute's Contemporary China Speakers Series on May 16, 2016.
In the last three decades China has surged from impoverished backwater to become the world’s second-biggest economy and largest trading nation. Yet as the recent tumult on global markets shows, China risks destabilizing the world as it makes the hard shift from an investment-driven to a consumer-oriented economy. The headwinds of a rapidly aging population, a battle against rampant corruption and an enormous national debt are also slowing the country’s growth. Will China mature into a global economic leader, trigger a crisis, or stagnate like Japan? Arthur Kroeber, one of the world’s leading commentators on the Chinese economy, tackles these tough questions.
Arthur R. Kroeber is head of research at Gavekal, a financial-services firm based in Hong Kong, founder of the China-focused Gavekal Dragonomics research service, and editor of China Economic Quarterly. He divides his time between Beijing and New York. Before founding Dragonomics in 2002, he spent fifteen years as a financial and economic journalist in China and South Asia. He is a senior non-resident fellow of the Brookings-Tsinghua Center, an adjunct professor at the Columbia UniversitySchool of International and Public Affairs, and a member of the National Committee on US-China Relations. His book "China’sEconomy: What Everyone Needs to Know" was published by Oxford University Press in April 2016.

28:08

Is the Chinese economy heading for collapse in the near future?

Globalization has brought China closer to other countries than ever before. A healthy Chin...

Is the Chinese economy heading for collapse in the near future?

Globalization has brought China closer to other countries than ever before. A healthy Chinese economy means way more than China itself. How firm of a footing is China’s economy on? Is it heading to some kind of crisis that some people contained?
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China’s Economic Outlook I Fortune

Wei Sun Christianson, Co-CEO, Asia Pacific, and ChinaCEO, Morgan StanleyDavid Daokui Li, Mansfield FreemanChairProfessor of Economics; Director, Center for China in the World Economy, Tsinghua UniversityMichael Pettis, Professor of Finance, Guanghua School of Management, Peking UniversityModerator: ClayChandler, Time Inc.
In nearly four decades, China has shifted from a centrally planned to a market-based economy that is the second-largest in the world. Over the next five years, this nation alone will import US $8 trillion worth of goods, attract $600 billion of foreign investment, make $750 billion in outbound investment, and send Chinese tourists on 700 million overseas visits. With long-term growth and sustainability in mind, China is now making a critical shift from an investment-driven model to an economic structure boosted by consumer spending. From creating trade initiatives and economic zones to lifting millions from poverty and driving innovation, China’s actions have the potential to shape the course of global business for years to come. Leading global and Chinese experts share important outcomes from the recent convening of the 19th National Congress and what they mean for business leaders looking to grow and capitalize on China’s new demographics.
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Understanding the Chinese Economy: Where Is It Headed?

Is China heading for a crash? China’s economy inspires extreme and, often, diametrically opposed views. Bears: growth is severely unbalanced, waste unbearably high, and collapse nigh; massive stock market crashes, weakening manufacturing, and devaluation of the Chinese currency are all risk factors. Bulls: past performance is proof of the government’s managerial skill, innovation is blossoming and China will soon surpass America as the global economic powerhouse. Can we go beyond the conventional wisdom?
Arthur R. Kroeber is founding partner of Gavekal Dragonomics, a China-focused economic research consultancy he helped establish in Beijing in 2002 after 15 years as a freelance financial journalist in Asia, and editor of its flagship publication China Economic Quarterly. He is also head of research at the parent company Gavekal, a financial services firm based in Hong Kong, where he advises financial, corporate and government clients on economic and political developments in China. Arthur has just published a new book, “China’sEconomy: What Everyone Needs to Know”, earlier in 2016 (https://china-economy-book.com/). Arthur is a senior non-resident fellow of the Brookings-Tsinghua Center for Public Policy, adjunct professor at Columbia University’s School of International and Public Affairs, and a member of the National Committee on US-China Relations. He lives in Beijing and New York.
Joe Studwell is the founding editor of the “China Economic Quarterly”. Since 1997 the China Economic Quarterly has been the leading source of analysis and understanding of the Chinese economy for business leaders, diplomats, academics and other China-watchers. Joe has contributed to the Economist, Financial Times, Asian Wall Street Journal, Far Eastern Economic Review, and many other publications. Previous books include “How Asia Asian Godfathers” (2007, about developmental failure in south-east Asia) which sold over 16,000 copies for Profile and “The China Dream” (2002, about the 1990s foreign investment gold rush in China), and “How Asia Works” (2013, an explication of economic development across the east Asian region). Visit his blog (https://joestudwell.wordpress.com/about/) for interesting updates.
This lecture was recorded on 21st November 2016 at MillLane Lecture Site, University of Cambridge.
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58:19

China's Economy in Crisis | Inside the Chinese Financial System with Anne Stevenson-Yang

China's Economy in Crisis | Inside the Chinese Financial System with Anne Stevenson-Yang

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In Episode 16 of Hidden Forces, host Demetri Kofinas speaks with Anne Stevenson-Yang. Anne is the co-founder of J CapitalResearch, which conducts ground-up, primary research for institutional money managers on stocks, the Chinese economy, and the Chinese financial system. Over 25 years in China, Mrs. Stevenson-Yang has also worked as an industry analyst and trade advocate, heading the US Information TechnologyOffice and the China operations of the US-ChinaBusiness Council. Anne Stevenson-Yang is the author of the recent book China Alone: China’sEmergence and Potential Return to Isolation, in which she sets out her views on the Chinese economy and political system, arguing that China historically repeats a cycle of expansion and retreat.
In this episode, we take a trip to the other side of the world. We travel to the land of China. Our conversation concerns itself with the contemporary changes in Chinese society that came after the death of Chairman Mao. What was life like in China before Nixon and Kissinger made their famous visit in 1971? Why did modernization and reform in China begin after 1978? Who was responsible for the opening in China? What was the role of Deng Xiaoping, and why is he remembered as “the architect” of a new brand of thinking that combined socialist ideology with pragmatic aspects of market economics – a system the Chinese call “Socialism with Chinese Characteristics.”
What changes did the Chinese experience between 1979 and 1989, during the implementation of the economic reforms of Deng Xiaoping? How did these reforms culminate into the protests in Tiananmen Square in 1989? What was the Chinese government’s reaction to the uprisings? The Chinese response differed significantly from the Soviet reaction to the fall of the Berlin Wall in the same year. The Chinese government decided to follow a different path after the massacres in Tiananmen Square, by turbocharging economic development. Explicit targets were set for GDP growth. There was selective liberalization of the Chinese economy, particularly in Chinese real estate. China placed a huge emphasis on building its manufacturing industries and on acquiring hard currency through exports. The Chinese financial system remained highly centralized and China’s currency, the renminbi, carefully controlled. All this was used towards re-investment with an almost single-minded commitment to hitting the government’s GDP targets.
Some have called the rise of China in the late 20th century a miracle. It is more appropriate to call it “the Chinese miracle.” The size of the Chinese economy has increased more than 25-fold in the last 25 years. Thirty years ago, the Chinese economy measured in at less than 5% of US GDP in exchange terms (perhaps as low as 2%). By 1992, the Chinese economy was only 6% of US GDP. By 2000 China weighed in at roughly 12-15% of US GDP. Today, China boasts a Gross Domestic Product that is roughly 60% that of United States. Loan Growth in the Chinese financial system has averaged 16% in the last 20 years. Loan growth in China reached an all-time high of 35% of GDP in June of 2009, amidst the greatest economic contraction since the Great Depression. Total debt in China recently surpassed 300% of GDP. This makes the finances of Western nations like the United States, France, and the United Kingdom seem frugal by comparison. In the first 7 years since the financial crisis, bank liabilities in the Chinese financial system grew by nearly $15 trillion dollars. This is the near equivalent of the consolidated size of all US commercial banks. China has used more cement in 3 years of massive overbuilding than the U.S. employed in all of the 20th Century. Hundreds of thousands of meters of unsold residential real estate sit empty around the country. There is a massive amount of industrial overcapacity in China. Chinese ghost cities have become almost as cliche as the fake Paris’, Venice, and Dubai’s created within mainland China. The Chinese economy is in terrible need of a recession. But the Chinese government cannot afford the recession that it desperately needs. Nevertheless, it cannot avoid the crisis that has been building in the Chinese financial system. How will the citizens of China, its trading partners, emerging markets and developed economies react when the reckoning finally arrives. How much longer can the Chinese government continue to postpone the inevitable?
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38:14

China Living On Edge Of Economic Collapse

The IMF International Monetary Fund along with many experts is talking about the possibili...

China Living On Edge Of Economic Collapse

The IMFInternational Monetary Fund along with many experts is talking about the possibility that China’s debt may go as high as 300% of the GDP by 2022. Financial experts are predicting gloom and doom for the Chinese communist country. China is using manipulation of their credit and debt to make wild predictions of growth. China is facing an increasing of large amount of countries copying their business model. Business contracts that were going to China are now finding their way to other parts of Asia with cheap labor markets and big improvement of inter-structures, see video for more..
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James J. Tsidkenu

On this day 21 years ago, Deng Xiaoping, the architect of modern China and the visionary of China’s reform and opening up, passed away. As this year is celebrating the 40th anniversary of the reform vision, what changes have taken place across the second largest economy? And what are the new tasks ahead for China? Charles Liu, founder of Hao Capital, and Yi Min, chief advisor of MTR China Business, join the discussion.
AlanBabington Smith, president of the Royal Asiatic SocietyBeijing, recommended a science fiction book series Foundation written by American authorIsaac Asimov. He shared his ideas on the power of human imagination and its motivation to the future possibilities at The Point’s special program, called Speaking Volumes during China’s Spring Festival.
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Chinese Macro-Economy in the Next Decade - 10th An...

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In addition, representatives of ChineseEmbassy, Chinese councillor of cultural exchange, director of Chinese security at the Chinese Embassy, representative of Chinese overseas association, president of Chinese student council, and focal person for Chinese security in the IndustrialArea and a ......

In addition, representatives of ChineseEmbassy, Chinese councillor of cultural exchange, Director of Chinese security at Chinese embassy, representative of Chinese Overseas association, President of Chinese student council, and focal person for Chinese security in IndustrialArea and a large number of Chinese students studying at different institutions of Islamabad....

Yes, the Chinese could counter Trump tariffs with restrictions on aircraft, cars and soybeans. But if I were Xi Jinping and the Chinese, I would take a different approach. I would limit Chinese students, tourists and real estate investment, sowing additional discord into the United States... ....

Global luggage maker Samsonite International SA plans to launch its own e-commerce website while expanding its bricks-and-mortar retail presence in the Chinese mainland to increase direct-to-consumer sales. It will also cooperate with more Chinese designers to cater to the increased aesthetic demands of Chinese consumers ... Thus, what we do here influences the Chinese consumers buying outside of China," he added....

The Chinese pantry cannot do without them, says Pauline D Loh. To the Chinese, food is medicine ... It is only in the past 30 years that animal protein has played an increasingly large role in Chinese diets, a departure from the traditional daily meals where meat was frugally used as flavoring ... Just as Indian vegetarian food depends a lot on lentils and pulses, the Chinese pantry cannot do without beans....

Now preparing to helm his fourth Chinese feature in four years, the veteran filmmaker talks life in Beijing and why making Hollywood-style movies in the Middle Kingdom is about more than just "turning hamburgers into noodles.". For veteran Hollywood filmmaker turned Beijing transplant Renny Harlin, Chinese-language moviemaking has become much more than just a fleeting infatuation....

Current rules limit foreign holdings in Chinese insurance joint ventures to 50 percent ... Top Chinese firms such as China Life Insurance and Ping An Insurance Group remain dominant players on their home turf, collectively holding about 90 percent of the life insurance market ... However, the wealth effect and the average income is rising," AIA's Cai said, referring to the smaller Chinese cities....

Thrills and spills of round-the-world race make impression on Chinese duo. Chinese sailor E Xianghong is hungry by name and hungry by nature. The 24-year-old, whose surname sounds the same as the Chinese word for "hungry," has just completed a 50-day stint competing in the Clipper Round the World yacht race ... Liu Yulei, the boat's other Chinese crew member, was just as psyched by the journey as his compatriot....